Five ways of looking at a butterfly

Wing underside view of a Swallowtail (Papilio machaon), Erdemli, Mersin, Turkey.

Wing underside view of a Swallowtail (Papilio machaon), Erdemli, Mersin, Turkey.{credit}Zeynel Cebeci, Wikimedia Commons{/credit}

One recent July on the banks of the Orfento river in Abruzzo, central Italy, I found myself wading through a parallel stream — an iridescent current of butterflies shuffling and pirouetting over a froth of wildflowers. It was hard to see which was the more dazzling, the glint of the water or those thousands of wings.

Such richness was common once in Europe and the United States. No more. A third of Europe’s butterflies have populations in decline, losses Martin Warren, chief executive of Butterfly Conservation, calls extremely worrying. They point to a major loss of wildlife and wild habitats across Europe.” (Along with their contribution to pollination, butterflies are indicator species.) Meanwhile numbers of North America’s Monarchs, whose 5,000-kilometre migration is a wonder of the continent, have dwindled by over 90% since the mid-1990s as their milkweed habitat disappears.

Peacock butterfly on buddleia.

Peacock butterfly on buddleia.{credit}John Fielding, geograph.org.uk, Wikimedia Commons{/credit}

No accident, then, that five books looping through our office this summer focus on the insect.

Environmental writer Michael McCarthy’s The Moth Snowstorm (John Murray) uses Lepidoptera as a lens on both personal loss and ecological degradation. McCarthy’s childhood, spent near Liverpool in the UK, was marked by his mother’s episodes of mental illness. He found his coping mechanism in a buddleia bush “covered in jewels, jewels as big as my seven-year-old hand…red admirals, peacocks, small tortoiseshells and painted ladies”. McCarthy’s absorption in nature deepened amid the astounding biodiversity of 1950s England, when hares “galumphed across every pasture” and moths on summer nights “would pack a car’s headlight beams like snowflakes in a blizzard”. This impassioned multiple narrative is expertly interwoven, but necessarily leaves the key thread dangling — the ultimate outcomes of climate change and galloping extinction.

Winged victories

The transformation of caterpillar to butterfly is one of the most enthralling events in the animal world. The larva partially liquefies within the carapace of its pupa before a momentous reorganisation and emergence in a form wholly other — log into ballerina. For Metamorphosis (Bloomsbury), naturalist-photographer Rupert Soskin spent two years snapping metamorphosing insects. The star has got to be the giant Atlas moth Attacus atlas. The larval progression to greenish-blue monstrosity; the month in a silky cocoon; the emergence as winged victory with a vast russet-and-gold span; the death after a week or so. A compressed existence that lends extraordinary pathos to its beauty.

Monarch caterpillar (Danaus plexippus) on butterfly milkweed.

Monarch caterpillar (Danaus plexippus) on butterfly milkweed.{credit}Marshal Hedin, Wikimedia Commons{/credit}

“Someone whose first memory is of being eaten alive by red ants in a playpen might be expected to develop a pathological loathing of entomology”. But lepidopterist Matthew Oates was bitten deeper by curiosity. For his personal and scientific memoir In Pursuit of Butterflies (Bloomsbury) Oates — an expert on butterfly species such as the extravagant Purple Emperor — has mined five decades of notes penned on the wing round the British Isles. This is a narrative that, for all its blow-by-blow accounts of sightings, lands as lightly as a Pearl-bordered Fritillary on the mind. Oates is a celebrant of place, a devotee of literary lights from Keats to Thoreau, and a man with significant messages for conservation — not least that “perhaps it is we who need rewilding, not Nature”.

John Ray by William Faithorne (wood engraving, 1693).

John Ray by William Faithorne (wood engraving, 1693).

Rainbow Dust (Vintage) by wildlife writer Peter Marren is a subtly brilliant cultural and scientific history of lepidoptery, interspersed with vignettes from his own life in the field. ‘Chasing the Clouded Yellow’ and ‘Graylings’, for instance, segue from Marren’s youthful butterfly collecting — a now-defunct hobby — to 1690, when pioneering entomological body the Society of Aurelians was founded, with the great naturalist John Ray as adviser. Marren parses the etymology of butterfly names from hairstreak to brimstone, the rarity of red in their wings, the recent explosion in research on their behaviour. There is a sighting, too, of Vladimir Nabokov, the towering novelist-lepidopterist whose mastery of language “seems at times to be deployed with the crisp decision of a pin through the thorax”.

The coevolution of pollinators and flowering plants  is bracingly explicated by Stephen Buchmann in The Reason for Flowers (Simon & Schuster). Buchmann, a pollination ecologist, notes that some large butterflies such as the Monarch can be “beautiful pollen klutzes”, lamenting that “their skinny legs rarely slip into the floral grooves”. He is more enthusiastic about moths. The sleek hawk moths he admires for their “fighter-jet look” and acrobatic feeding on the night blooms of datura, while the yucca moth, endowed with weird elongated mouthparts, scoops and makes “meatballs” of pollen to pack onto the plant’s stigma.

The arrival en masse of these five books has made my summer, even though each carries some reminder of what these beguiling and unpredictable insects are up against. Yet, as the bee’s case indicates, a shift in agricultural practice and land use — including the way we manage back gardens — can help restore habitats to support wildflowers, insects and insectivores. Scientists from Miriam Rothschild to Dave Goulson have shown it’s possible to ensure butterflies still (as John Ray had it) “adorn the world and delight the eyes of men”.

 

For Nature’s full coverage of science in culture, visit www.nature.com/news/booksandarts.

Menageries of the mind

Aquatint etching from Doty and Waterston's A Swarm, A Flock, A Host

From Doty and Waterston’s A Swarm, A Flock, A Host (aquatint etching, 2013){credit}Courtesy of the artist and DC Moore Gallery, New York{/credit}

Whatever ‘being human’ means, it seems irrevocably tied to the bestial. In real life we tame, avoid or study animals (think pigs, grizzlies, lab mice). In stories, we freight them with characteristics human, mystical or approximately their own (think the White Rabbit, Moby-Dick, Mrs Tiggywinkle). Beasts are burdened indeed — by human needs, questionings, hopes, dreams, morals and fantasies.

Reflecting that obsession, a small, beautifully curated exhibition at the British Library showcases a trove of illustrated books and audio from its holdings. Animal Tales abounds with children’s volumes from the seventeenth century on. But this is definitely a show for all ages, and one too that scatters science amid the cultural offerings.

A random sampling turns up a letter recording observations of summer birds of passage by Gilbert White (author of The Natural History of Selbourne, 1789); poems by Mark Doty (“Snail exudes a silver avenue”); cartoonist Art Spiegelman discussing his Holocaust cat-and-mouse saga Maus on tape; an eighteenth-century woodblock print of China’s picaresque hero Monkey battling a demon king; and an 1875 edition of the Grimm brothers’ Little Red Riding Hood showing slavering wolf and unfazed child against the proverbial dark wood.

Organised around themes such as animal allegories and metamorphoses, the show, curated by Matthew Shaw, reminds early on that Darwin and Freud expanded our view of animal nature — Darwin, by revealing our common descent, Freud by locating the wildness within the human psyche. (Multitudes of key findings in science are, of course, predicated on animals, from Darwin’s finches and Pavlov’s dogs to Julian Huxley’s great crested grebes.)

‘Very real, and very close’

On that front, I was moved by White’s mention of the ‘grasshopper lark’ (or warbler) — now on the IUCN Red List. I asked Shaw what, in an age of biodiversity drain, cloning and CRISPR, he feels stories hinging on animals have to tell us.

From Johannes Comenius's Orbis Sensualium Pictus (, 1659 edition)

From Johann Comenius’s Orbis Sensualium Pictus (The Visual World in Pictures, 1659 edition) {credit}The British Library{/credit}

Shaw said that, as a parent, he had noted how the state of childhood and of animals has been closely associated in culture, prompting him to wonder “how this has played out historically and culturally. In general, the stories in Animal Tales speak to a time when animals were very real, and very close.  We are now beyond that, and live away from animals in the main, yet have a greater imaginative link to them.”

To trace the dynamic progress of that association in this show is to step into multiple cultural streams. Philosopher Michel de Montaigne‘s famous question in his 1580 Essays (“When I play with my cat, how do I know that she is not amusing herself with me more than I with her?”), for instance, gets a mischievous gloss from Dutch painter Pieter van Veen in his 1602 edition — a charming sketch of cat and man in the margin.

I was mesmerised by a minuscule volume from 1659. Orbis Sensualium Pictus (The Visual World in Pictures) by trailblazing Czech educational theorist Johann Comenius is one of the first children’s picture books. Comenius  taught Latin using ‘nature’s way’ — through things, not grammar — and in the book employs the calls of various animals (juxtaposed with exquisitely whimsical engravings) to teach the language. Thus, the bleat of a lamb teaches the sound ‘b’, while the chirping, quacking and hooting of various species are described in both Latin and English, as:  “Ursus múrmurat: The bear grumbleth”.

Harnessing the bestial

Sarah Trimmer’s 1793 History of the Red-Breast Family also harnessed the bestial to enrich learning. A noted educational reformer in the tradition of Anna Barbauld, Trimmer used the tale (also known as Fabulous Histories) to teach children respect for animals which, she presciently argued, would help develop ‘universal benevolence’ later in life.

Sarah Trimmer's 1793 History of the Red-breast Family

Sarah Trimmer’s 1793 History of the Red-breast Family{credit}The British Library{/credit}

Twentieth-century offerings reveal animals of a fiercer cast, in keeping with a century of war. In novelist Chinua Achebe’s 1976 How the Leopard Got His Claws, Adrienne Kennaway’s illustration of the beast is a study in violence — made not long after Nigeria’s civil war. British poet Ted Hughes’s 1973 Crow, a collaboration with American multimedia artist Leonard Baskin, is stark and unsettling. In ‘Crow and Mama’, Baskin’s bird is darkness visible, save for its huge reptilian feet. It broods next to the lines, “He tried a step, then a step, and again a step — /Every one scarred her face for ever.”

There is more — from the stunning Bestiary by Pablo Neruda and woodcut master Antonio Frasconi, to Judith Kerr’s  disruptive tiger, Beatrix Potter’s Peter Rabbit and David Garnett’s Lady Into Fox. You can listen in to gems such as Noël Coward reading Ogden Nash’s poem Elephant. The final thematic area, ‘Call of the Wild’, features the work of writers who have engaged “with animals as animals”, Shaw noted. Here among masterpieces by Jack London and Herman Melville are Doty’s evocative poems from his collaboration with artist Darren Waterston, the modern bestiary A Swarm, A Flock, A Host.

As I left Animal Tales for that clogged artery, the Euston Road, I harked back to the thought that we are drawn to animals not least because we are increasingly alienated from them. We are a long way from the painted mammoths of Chauvet Cave, riding out what many call the sixth great extinction. Yet fauna retain their dominion over our imagination. Animal Tales is a way into that menagerie — or Serengeti — of the mind.

Animal Tales runs through 1 November at the British Library, Euston Road, London.

 

For Nature’s full coverage of science in culture, visit www.nature.com/news/booksandarts.

A scintillating shortlist for the Royal Society prize

Libri_Vincent_van_Gogh

{credit}Still Life with French Novels and a Rose, Vincent Van Gogh (oil, 1887){/credit}

As the literati strive to predict the future of the book, one thing is clear in the here and now: the best of popular science writing is still all about clarity, rigour and brio. This year’s six-book shortlist for the Royal Society Winton Prize for Science Books bristles with that mix.

The Society’s annual prize, now worth £25,000, is awarded to the year’s “outstanding popular science books from around the world”. This half-dozen certainly delves into many worlds — the universe inside the skull, the cosmos of numbers, the subatomic, the gene, and the dynamic interplay between biology and quantum mechanics, and people and planet.

Meet the contenders (in alphabetical order of authors’ surnames).

The Man Who Couldn’t Stop by David Adam (Picador)

Seasoned science journalist (and Nature colleague) Adam’s searing study-cum-memoir, reviewed here, is a twin journey through his own knotted, traumatic experience of obsessive-compulsive disorder, and the evolving science surrounding it. A reflective eye on what Adam calls “our siege mentality”.

Alex Through the Looking-Glass: How Life Reflects Numbers and Numbers Reflect Life by Alex Bellos (Bloomsbury)

The erudite and engaging Bellos, a writer and speaker on mathematics, follows up his bestselling 2010 Alex’s Adventures in Numberland with this equally adroit interweaving of maths history, the peculiarities of day-to-day maths, and the mindscapes of mathematicians. (Why is 24 is better than 31 in the context of anti-dandruff shampoo? You’ll need to read the book.)

Smashing Physics: Inside the World’s Biggest Experiment by Jon Butterworth (Headline)

Butterworth, a particle physicist and CERN insider, here (writes my colleague Jo Baker) gives “a personal account of three years that shook his research field – from the switching on of the Large Hadron Collider at CERN in 2009 to the discovery of the Higgs boson in 2012. In a lucid treatment —  part memoir, part primer — he relates the ups, downs and minutiae of everyday life at the particle physics coalface and reflects on the public and political perceptions of science.”

Life’s Greatest Secret: The Story of the Race to Crack the Genetic Code by Matthew Cobb (Profile)
Zoologist Cobb masterfully recontextualises the 1953 discovery of the structure of DNA (reviewed here). One for the shelf bearing seminal early studies by James Watson and Horace Judson, Cobb’s treatment beautifully explicates the contributions of physics, biology and chemistry, and scientists from Oswald Avery to Rosalind Franklin.

Life on the Edge: The Coming of Age of Quantum Biology by Johnjoe Mcfadden and Jim Al-Khalili (Bantam Press)
Al-Khalili (a physicist) and McFadden (a molecular biologist) take on the vexed nexus of quantum weirdness and life itself in this exploration of an emergent field of scientific endeavour (reviewed here). From synthbio to quantum tunnelling inside enzymes, a trip into strange, and strangely compelling, realms of research.

Adventures in the Anthropocene: A Journey to the Heart of the Planet we Made by Gaia Vince (Chatto & Windus)
Writer, broadcaster and former Nature news editor Vince covered six continents over two years to craft this compilation (reviewed here). Bucking the trend to view the environmental challenges of the Anthropocene with terrified or jaundiced eye, she discovered innovators and pioneers working towards new models of adaptation and environmental ‘reverse engineering’. A grand survey of development endeavour through a science writer’s lens.

In looking through this list, it occurred to me anew how popular science writing remains one of the great exemplars of multidisciplinarity. It is the context to the findings — the history, the socioeconomic realities, the psychology of the players and their rivals, the leadup to discovery and the societal implications of its deployment — that reveals the real-world significance of the science.

Scientific storytelling is one of the great artforms of our age. Its roots may stretch back to Mary Somerville’s monumental On the Connexion of the Physical Sciences 181 years ago (reviewed here), but its heyday is now.

The judges of this year’s prize include chair Ian Stewart (mathematician and Royal Society Fellow), Guardian books editor Claire Armitstead, Channel 4 lead anchor Krishnan Guru-Murthy, electronics engineer Jo Shien Ng, science broadcaster and author Adam Rutherford, and novelist Sarah Waters. The winner will be announced at a Royal Society public event on 24 September, hosted by Brian Cox, Royal Society Professor for Public Engagement in Science.

 

For Nature’s full coverage of science in culture, visit www.nature.com/news/booksandarts.