Published 25 November, 2020; last updated 10 December, 2020
According to very rough estimates, the monarch butterfly:
The Monarch Butterfly is a butterfly known for its migration across North America.1
The average mass of a monarch butterfly prior to its annual migration has been estimated to be 600mg2
The following table gives some very rough estimates of energy expenditures, speeds and distances for several modes of flight, based on confusing information from a small number of papers (see footnotes for details).
Activity | Description | Energy expenditure per mass ( J/g⋅hr) | Energy expenditure for 600mg butterfly (J/s) | Speed (m/s) | distance/energy (m/J) |
Soaring/gliding | Unpowered flight, including gradual decline and ascent via air currents | 8-333 | ~0.0014 – 0.00564 | Very roughly 2.5-3.6 on average5 | 446- 25716 |
Cruising | Low speed powered flight | Very roughly 2097 | 0.0358 | Maximum: >59 | Maximum: >14310 |
Sustained flapping | High speed powered flight | Very roughly 83711 | ~0.1412 | Maximum: >13.913 | Maximum: >9914 |
Soaring is estimated to be potentially very energy efficient (see Table 1), since it mostly makes use of air currents for energy. It seems likely that at least a small amount of powered flight is needed for getting into the air, however monarch butterflies can apparently fly for hundreds of kilometers in a day15, so supposing that they don’t stop many times in a day, taking off seems likely a negligible part of the flight.16
This would require ideal wind conditions, and our impression is that in practice, butterflies do not often fly very long distances without using at least a small amount of powered flight.17
There is stronger evidence that monarch butterflies can realistically soar around 85% of the time, from Gibo & Pallett, who report their observations of butterflies under relatively good conditions.18 So as a high estimate, we use this fraction of the time for soaring, and suppose that the remaining time is the relatively energy-efficient cruising, and take the optimistic end of all ranges. This gives us:
One second of flight = 0.15 seconds cruising + 0.85 seconds soaring
________________= 0.15s * 5 m/s cruising + 0.85s * 3.6m/s soaring
________________= 0.75m cruising + 3.06m soaring
________________= 3.81m total
This also gives us:
= 0.75m / 143 m/J cruising + 3.06m / 2571 m/J soaring
= 0.0064 J total
Thus we have:
distance/energy = 3.81m/0.0064 J = 595 m/J
For a low estimate of efficiency, we will assume that all of the powered flight is the most energetic flight, that powered flight is required half the time on average, and that the energy cost of gliding is twice that of resting. This gives us:
Energy efficiency = (50% * soaring distance + 50% * powered distance) / (50% * soaring energy + 50% * powered energy)
= (50% * soaring distance/time + 50% * powered distance/time) / (50% * soaring energy/time + 50% * powered energy/time)
= (0.5 * 2.5m/s + 0.5 * 13.9m/s) / (0.5 * (0.0056 * 2) J/s + 0.5 * 0.14 J/s)
= 108 m/J
Thus we have, very roughly:
distance/energy = 100,000-600,000 m/kJ
For concreteness, a kJ is the energy in around a quarter of a raspberry. 19
As noted earlier, the average mass of a monarch butterfly prior to its annual migration has been estimated to be 600mg20
Thus we have:
mass*distance/energy = 0.0006 kg * 108 — 0.0006 kg * 595 m/J
= 0.065 — 0.36 kg⋅m/J
Primary author: Ronny Fernandez
Zhan, Shuai, Wei Zhang, Kristjan Niitepõld, Jeremy Hsu, Juan Fernández Haeger, Myron P. Zalucki, Sonia Altizer, Jacobus C. de Roode, Steven M. Reppert, and Marcus R. Kronforst. “The Genetics of Monarch Butterfly Migration and Warning Colouration.” Nature 514, no. 7522 (October 2014): 317–21. https://doi.org/10.1038/nature13812.
…Late summer monarchs average approximately 600mg.”
Gibo, David L., and Pallett, Megan J., “Soaring Flight of Monarch Butterflies, Danaus Plexippus (Lepidoptera: Danaidae), during the Late Summer Migration in Southern Ontario.” Canadian Journal of Zoology, July 1979. https://doi.org/10.1139/z79-180.
Usa Monarch. Soaring MONARCH BUTTERFLIES at Their Mexico Migration Site, 2019. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a-8SPgG–6I.
Soaring accounted for 1964 s or 83.5% of this time, and powered flight for 359 s or 15.3%.”
Gibo, David L., and Pallett, Megan J., “Soaring Flight of Monarch Butterflies, Danaus Plexippus (Lepidoptera: Danaidae), during the Late Summer Migration in Southern Ontario.” Canadian Journal of Zoology, July 1979. https://doi.org/10.1139/z79-180.
…Late summer monarchs average approximately 600mg.”
Gibo, David L., and Pallett, Megan J., “Soaring Flight of Monarch Butterflies, Danaus Plexippus (Lepidoptera: Danaidae), during the Late Summer Migration in Southern Ontario.” Canadian Journal of Zoology, July 1979. https://doi.org/10.1139/z79-180.