Establishing butterfly transects
In this activity, students set up and walk a transect to observe and record butterfly sightings. Butterfly sightings are then recorded on the Monarch Butterfly New Zealand Trust website.
Modify this activity to suit to your management needs. If parent help is available, the entire class can set up and monitor several transects. Alternatively, set up a single transect with an envirogroup or other small group of interested students.
New Zealand butterfly families
The butterfly family Nymphalidae holds 12 species of butterflies that are found in New Zealand.
By the end of this activity, students should be able to:
know what a transect is and why they are used for ecological monitoring
appreciate the importance of systematic observation (the act of noting and recording something) rather than merely looking
understand that collection of data over a number of years provides scientists with information about a species’ population size and provides information on population decline or increase
appreciate that citizen scientists work in partnership with scientists to answer interesting and relevant questions.
Download the Word file (see link below) for:
introduction/background notes
instructions on what you need and what to do
discussion questions
student handout.
Nature of science
Scientific investigations involve the collection of relevant data in a systematic manner according to clear protocols. In this activity, the transect data is used to answer questions about yearly population assessments and habitat management.