Subscribe to daily environment news





 

Click for news Click for pictures
National Tree Day

Planet Ark Home


Take Wing With the Butterflies at London Museum
Mail this story to a friend | Printer friendly version

UK: July 21, 2008


LONDON - If you have ever dreamed about what it's like to be a butterfly, then flutter over to the "Amazing Butterflies" exhibition at London's Natural History museum before Aug. 17.


The exhibition gives visitors the chance to "shrink to the size of a caterpillar", find their way through a maze dotted with dangerous sticky plants and spiders, forage for food before emerging from your chrysalis to take flight on a zip slide aerial runway.

The exhibition's star attraction is the butterfly house, where visitors can walk among hundreds of live moths and butterflies of every size, shape and colour as they flit from one exotic plant to the next. You can even see butterflies emerge from their pupa in the exhibition's very own hatchery.

"There are about 40 or 50 sorts of butterflies, they are from Africa mainly, South America, Southeast Asia as well," Exhibition Developer Alex Gaffikin told Reuters on Friday.

There is also a butterfly garden, where visitors can get tips on which plants to nurture at home if they would like to attract butterflies native to Britain and seasonal visitors.

The exhibition is aimed at families with school children, but has also proven a hit with older visitors as well.

"Our target audiences in the museum, people we're trying to attract are families with children from five to 11," Gaffikin said. "We're also getting grannies coming and loving the butterflies."

Gaffikin said Amazing Butterflies was organised partly to attract busy parents looking for ways to entertain their children over the school holidays and has seen some 90,000 visitors since it opened in April.

"We did a sort of evaluation with the museum's visitors on what would interest them the most and butterflies scored really highly," she said. "The kids fell in love with the butterflies."

Alongside the slide, the maze, the house and the garden, the museum has also put together a lively, educational Internet package on the subject.

Keen lepidopterists can search the site for pictures of their favourite creatures, read about conservation issues and be kept up to date on all the hatching, matching and dispatching going on at the museum.

"It's one of the most popular exhibitions we've had in years," Gaffikin said.

Amazing Butterflies

Natural History Museum (www.nhm.ac.uk)

London

Until August 17th

Adults: 5 pounds (US$9.96)

Children: 3.50 pounds

(Editing by Paul Casciato) (US$1=.5020 Pound)


Story by James Couturier


REUTERS NEWS SERVICE



© 2008 Reuters Limited. All rights reserved. Republication or redistribution of Reuters content, including by framing or similar means, is expressly prohibited without the prior written consent of Reuters.
top

 
TODAY'S
ENVIRONMENT
NEWS

AUSTRALIA:
Australia Adviser Urges Cautious Carbon Targets

AUSTRALIA:
FACTBOX - Impacts of Australia Emissions Trade

EGYPT:
Landslide Hits East Cairo Shanty Town, Kills 11

GERMANY:
Germany Engulfed in Row Over Nuclear Waste Sites

HAITI:
Death Toll in Flooded Haitian Town Soars

INTERNATIONAL:
FACTBOX - Greenhouse Gas Curbs, From Australia to India

JAPAN:
Honda Banks on Hybrids, Russia for Big Europe Push

MEXICO:
Tropical Storm Lowell Forms of Mexico's Pacific

MOZAMBIQUE:
Bush Fires Kill 32 in Mozambique

NIGERIA:
Nigeria to Spray Pest-Ravaged Northern Farmlands

NORWAY:
Thaw Of Polar Regions May Need New UN Laws - Experts

NORWAY:
Norway Surveys Troll Field for Carbon Storage

PHILIPPINES:
Landslide Kills 9 in Philippines, 14 Missing

UK:
Torrential Rain Causes Floods in Britain

UK:
Britain Meets Biofuels Target But Imports Dominate

UK:
UN Plan to Protect Forests Flawed - UK Adviser

US:
Turn White House Green? Consider the Palin Factor

US:
GM Aims to Recycle Waste From Most of its Factories

US:
Asian Pollution Could Spur US, European Warming

US:
US Congress Faces Big Push on Offshore Drilling

US:
Fierce Hurricane Ike Targets Gulf, Hanna Nears US

US:
EPA Tightens Lawn Mower, Motor Boat Emission Rules

US:
Experts Offer Scaled-Back Sea Level Rise Forecast

US:
Monsanto Receives Chinese Approval for Soybean Imports



previous day


This site developed by Frontline, and managed by Planet Ark using RPM-NT.

Site designed by Jon Dee @ Planet Ark.

Radiant