Countdown continues: Celebrate summer in the country with butterfly tally

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    An Eastern Tiger Swallowtail is just one example of the butterflies that volunteers might count June 30.
    The Eastern Tiger Swallowtail is just one example of the butterflies that volunteers might count June 30.

    LOUISVILLE, Ky. — Children and adults are invited to join in a June 30 trek to Oldham County to learn about nature from experts and to add to the national butterfly count.

    University of Louisville biology professor emeritus Charles Covell and other butterfly specialists will lead the local count and teach volunteers how to identify the winged insects they see in the woods and fields of UofL’s Horner Wildlife Sanctuary and other nearby property in Oldham County.

    “Here’s an opportunity to view a number of common Kentucky butterflies and learn their names and a little bit about their life histories and benefit to us as pollinators, food for birds and other animals and often-overlooked objects of beauty,” Covell said.

    The count will be done in a specified area from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m., although participants can leave when they wish. Covell suggests that participants wear hats, hiking shoes, long pants and long-sleeved shirts and bring sunscreen, water, lunch and insect repellent. The experts will supply nets but counters also can use cameras, binoculars and notebooks.

    Volunteer counters of all ages should meet at 9:30 a.m. in the parking lot of Sugar Babe Antiques, 7511 Highway 329 in Crestwood, about one mile northwest of Interstate 71’s Exit 14 and about 20 miles north of Louisville.

    If it rains steadily, the count will be postponed until the same time Sunday, July 1, if that day’s weather is clear.

    Last year, 14 volunteers counted 818 butterflies from 37 species adding to the 40-year total of more than 32,000 butterflies tabulated. Although Covell retired in 2004 from UofL, he has continued to lead the annual local count for its four decades. He now works as an adjunct curator for the McGuire Center for Lepidoptera & Biodiversity in Gainesville, Fla.

    Covell and Richard Henderson of Louisville co-founded the Society of Kentucky Lepidopterists for the study of butterflies and moths in 1974. Covell wrote “Butterflies and Moths of Kentucky” and the 1984 Peterson “Field Guide to Moths of Eastern North America.”

    For more information, contact Covell at 502-639-2691 or covell@louisville.edu.

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    Judy Hughes
    Judy Hughes is a senior communications and marketing coordinator for UofL’s Office of Communications and Marketing and associate editor of UofL Magazine. She previously worked in news as a writer and editor for a daily newspaper and The Associated Press.