The Academy of Natural Sciences of Drexel University has over 3 million specimens in its entomology collection, but one butterfly stands out from the rest. The butterfly is literally one in a million because it exhibits both the physical characteristics of a male and a female.
Retired chemical engineer Chris Johnson from Swarthmore, Penn., was volunteering for the Academy's Butterflies! exhibit in October last year when he spotted an odd butterfly while emptying the exhibit”s pupa chamber. The pupa chamber is where cocoons and chyrsalises are placed.
Johnson related that, as the creature opened up, he noticed that it was different from other butterflies. Its two right wings were those typically found in the females of the species, which were brown and marked by white and yellow spots.
The insect's two left wings, however, were smaller and darker with green, purple and blue markings, which characterize males. The coloration of the body was also perfectly split lengthwise down, essentially making the butterfly half-male and half-female.
Entomology Collection Manager Jason Weintraub, a butterfly expert who was contacted to examine the bizarre-looking insect, confirmed that the butterfly was a Lexias pardalis, a member of the butterfly family commonly called "brush-footed" butterflies.
The lepidopterist, likewise, said that the butterfly had a rare condition known as bilateral gynandromorphy, which is characterized by having both the male and female external characteristics.
The condition is different from hermaphroditism. A hermaphrodite only has the outward characteristics of one gender but has both the reproductive organs of the male and female.
Weintraub said that the condition is most noticeable among birds and butterflies because the two genders of these species have distinctly different coloration, but scientists do not currently know how prevalent the condition is because it can easily go unnoticed in animals where the males and females resemble each other.
He explained that the condition may happen when an organism's sex chromosomes did not separate during cell division in its early development, which causes some of the cells to have a female genotype and the others to have a male genotype. This leads to the animal having the characteristics of both sexes.
"In most cases, such specimens are 'discovered' in museum collections by a researcher who is carefully examining reproductive organs of insects under the microscope and stumbles across a specimen with both male and female characteristics," Weintraub said.
The butterfly was among the pupae shipped from a butterfly farm in Malaysia's Penang Island in October. Lexias butterflies live in Southeast Asian rainforests.
The special butterfly, which has a short lifespan typical to its kind, has been preserved and pinned. It will be exhibited at the Academy from Jan. 17 to Feb. 16.
GMT 09:41 2017 Sunday ,19 November
Delhi half-marathon to go ahead despite smog, court rulesGMT 19:27 2017 Monday ,06 November
Plea for 'urgent action' on climate shadowed by TrumpGMT 17:50 2017 Saturday ,04 November
Trump admin sued over stalling to protect sea turtlesGMT 19:12 2017 Wednesday ,04 October
Scotland says no to frackingGMT 12:19 2017 Friday ,29 September
Trump lifts Puerto Rico shipping restrictionsGMT 20:30 2017 Wednesday ,27 September
Dutch court to hear new case on I.Coast chemical spillGMT 18:30 2017 Sunday ,24 September
What now? Mexicans in shelters ask themselves after quakeGMT 21:52 2017 Wednesday ,20 September
Desperate parents, missing children at quake-hit Mexico City schoolMaintained and developed by Arabs Today Group SAL.
All rights reserved to Arab Today Media Group 2021 ©
Maintained and developed by Arabs Today Group SAL.
All rights reserved to Arab Today Media Group 2021 ©
Send your comments
Your comment as a visitor