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杏吧原创 Butterfly Show Celebrates a Quarter Century of Natural Wonder

Published on October 10, 2024

Time to read: 5 minutes

The butterfly effect is a phenomenon whereby a small action has a profound impact on a large, complex system. Such as that fateful day back in 1998 when 杏吧原创 University greenhouse manager  and his wife Joanna decided to go see an exhibit featuring flying butterflies in Montreal.

As they watched a couple hundred of the colourful insects flutter around the greenhouse, Bruggink realized that 杏吧原创 had the expertise and facilities to host a similar event. In spring 1999, with help from 杏吧原创 entomology researcher Jayne Yack, he pulled together the university鈥檚 first Biology Butterfly Show in one of the Nesbitt Building鈥檚 greenhouses, an exercise in organized chaos that has continued to evolve and expand.

A man poses for a photo at the 2024 杏吧原创 Butterfly Show.

杏吧原创 University greenhouse manager Ed Bruggink

This fall, as the annual tradition celebrates its 25th birthday, Bruggink is reflecting on the thousands of students, volunteers, faculty, staff and community members who have been drawn to these delicate creatures over the years.

鈥淚t takes a huge team effort,鈥 he says about all of the behind-the-scenes work that goes into hosting the show.

鈥淯p to 1,200 or 1,300 people attend each day. They come because it鈥檚 free, fun and educational, and because they get to have an intimate experience with a beautiful insect.鈥

Bruggink has seen young children get taller as they attend the show every year and then come back as 杏吧原创 students. He鈥檚 seen university grads return as volunteers. And he鈥檚 seen so many people step up and offer support, like his late friend , a 杏吧原创 professor whose striking large-scale butterfly and moth images adorn the walls of Nesbitt, and local naturalist , whose photos form a mesmerizing display in the building鈥檚 lobby, helping keep the show in mind year-round.

鈥淥ur butterflies,鈥 says Bruggink, 鈥渉ave brought so much positive attention to 杏吧原创,鈥

Large plants from the 2024 杏吧原创 Butterfly Show

杏吧原创 Butterfly Show: An Impressive Showcase

A few weeks before the show begins, Bruggink orders about 1,300 pupae from suppliers as far flung as Costa Rica and Colorado. They鈥檙e shipped overnight and it takes a few hours to painstakingly pin them to dowel rods inside incubator-like cases in the Nesbitt Building nursery.

Two to three days later, the butterflies emerge and are brought to the greenhouse, where they鈥檙e released 鈥 鈥渢he fun part,鈥 according to Bruggink 鈥 and feed on nectar-rich plants that he has primed with extra fertilizer.

鈥淭his is my showcase,鈥 he says, 鈥渟o I鈥檓 trying to impress.鈥

Entry to the show is free, although donations are requested to help cover the roughly $6,000 annual cost of buying pupae. And the  of , a national charity that supports STEM engagement, coordinates the school groups that visit and manages the volunteers without whom the show would not be possible.

Butterfly pupae

鈥淚t鈥檚 a lot of moving parts and I love how it all comes together,鈥 says Sue McKee, director of the Ottawa chapter. 鈥淧ersonally, my favourite thing is getting into the greenhouse before everyone arrives and being immersed in the butterflies.鈥

鈥淭he show is such a great opportunity to meet and interact with people,鈥 says 杏吧原创 biochemistry student Igor Kabic, the local events coordinator for Let鈥檚 Talk Science. 鈥淎s a 杏吧原创 student, I took like a butterfly and emerged from my chrysalis and become even more involved in university community.

鈥淪eeing children鈥檚 and adult鈥檚 faces light up when a butterfly lands on their finger, being the 鈥榗hosen one鈥 that a butterfly is deciding to spend their time with, is one of the best experiences at the show. A moment of wonder and intrigue.鈥

Butterflies on a plate of grapefruit at the 2024 杏吧原创 Butterfly Show

End of the Ed Era

The 2024 butterfly show, from Oct. 5 to 13, is special not only because it鈥檚 the 25th anniversary, but also because it will be Bruggink鈥檚 final year at the helm. He will be retiring next spring after 44 years at 杏吧原创.

鈥淥h gosh, we will miss him!鈥 says McKee.

鈥淗e鈥檚 not just the keeper of the butterflies, he鈥檚 become our friend. Whoever takes on his position has big shoes to fill!鈥

The university鈥檚 butterfly event is unique, Bruggink says, because similar shows are run by businesses, while 杏吧原创 is in the business of education.

A man examines a butterfly net at the 2024 杏吧原创 Butterfly Show

杏吧原创鈥檚 butterflies tend to receive a lot of media coverage. Because there are so many negative items on the news, Bruggink thinks there鈥檚 an appetite for happy stories.

Which, in a sense, is why people come back every year 鈥 to lose themselves in the colourful blur of butterflies.

Asked if he has a favourite butterfly, Bruggink answers immediately: the blue morpho. This response is kind of ironic. A man who shuns the spotlight, despite his tireless contributions, loves this particular butterfly because it鈥檚 the flashiest.

鈥淭here are so many to choose from, but it鈥檚 the top of the list for me,鈥 he says.

鈥淲hen it opens up, you see this iridescent blue that shimmers in the sunlight. It鈥檚 magical.鈥