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M onarch B utterfly With comments from students in 3A

Monarch Butterfly

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Monarch Butterfly. With comments from students in 3A. One of the chrysalises has gold on it. – Laressa. I can see a wing in a pupa. – Rediate. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Monarch Butterfly

Monarch Butterfly

With comments from students in 3A

Page 2: Monarch Butterfly

One of the chrysalises

has gold on it. – Laressa

I can see a wing in a pupa. – Rediate

Page 3: Monarch Butterfly

I saw that there are seven pupas and two larvae. First there will be an egg. Then there will be a larva.

Then there will be a pupa. Then there will be an adult. The pupas are green and (the) larva is yellow

and black. – Omar

Page 4: Monarch Butterfly

I observe that four of the larvae have

turned into chrysalises. They

have really changed. The

milkweed plant has changed a lot, too, because most of

the leaves are gone. – Sammy

Page 5: Monarch Butterfly

I hope one is going to grow into a butterfly because I like butterflies a

lot. – Xchel

Page 6: Monarch Butterfly

I just remembered cocoons were for

moths. Our caterpillars are

(now) chrysalises. – Sol

I saw a caterpillar’s chrysalis and I saw

a wing inside. – Anna

Page 7: Monarch Butterfly

There are twelve living things in total. There are eight larvae and

four pupas. I think the last time we miscounted. – Josephine

Page 8: Monarch Butterfly

The chrysalises are green. Caterpillars walk like

rippling water. They are very squishy. – Natalie

Page 9: Monarch Butterfly

The legs are simple. It (the

caterpillar) moves its head. I saw it

eat. It was fantastic. – Alex C.

They (the caterpillars) seem to use their prolegs to stick upside down and their true legs to move. – August

Page 10: Monarch Butterfly

One (caterpillar) is close to the water. Watch out!! – Sam

The caterpillar is a pupa. He or she will turn into a

chrysalis. – Sarah

Page 11: Monarch Butterfly

There are four pupas and five

larvae. The larvae are eating less and many are starting

to curl up in a spiral shape. – Elena

Page 12: Monarch Butterfly

I measured one of the last caterpillars standing and I found

out that it is six centimeters long. Right now five are pupas. I noticed that when caterpillars are about to turn into pupas they start to slow

down and they get darker colors. –Sol

Page 13: Monarch Butterfly

I observed that the first time I saw the caterpillars they barely moved, but

now they’re moving a lot. The larvae grew three quarters as big as my

thumb. – Jack

Page 14: Monarch Butterfly

I observed that one is turning into a pupa. I

know that because it has stuck (itself) to

a branch. – Taylor

Page 15: Monarch Butterfly

I noticed that the Monarch larvae are twice as big (as they were before). I discovered that there is a lot more

frass than last time! – Roberto

Page 16: Monarch Butterfly

There are five pupas and four caterpillars. There is one that we didn’t count

because it is black and it isn’t moving. I noticed that the pupas are turning

goldish and one is seethroughish. – Eva

Page 17: Monarch Butterfly

There is a larva that is dead. It is black and

losing its natural colors. – Karina

I know that maybe half of the Monarch

caterpillars will live long. But I’m still

figuring it out. – Hector

Page 18: Monarch Butterfly

Monarch pupas are here and one is dead. Yuck! The dead one is black.

The rest are fine. – Luke

Page 19: Monarch Butterfly

All of the chrysalises, including the “J” are

hanging from a leaf except for the one chrysalis

hanging from the container. – Natalia

The pupa has a pattern that shows if it is a male or a female. A line in the

middle shows the difference. – Alexander W.

Page 20: Monarch Butterfly