Into The Wild
Great Butterfly Sites
Baltimore checkerspot
Photo: Phil Kelly
The warmer days of summer stir us from our indoor confines. Such weather
has the same effect on butterflies. After months of waiting at various
life stages — eggs, caterpillars, or winged adults — these cold-blooded
creatures flutter forth in force from May through August.
All across Chicago Wilderness, butterflies undulate above prairie, wetlands,
dunes — a multitude of ecological habitats. The region’s habitat
diversity makes it a premier area to see more than 100 species. While you’re
sure to view a few in your own backyard, to truly savor the region’s
diversity, visit one of the area’s best butterfly sites:
Illinois Beach State Park
Lake County, IL
You won’t have to hike far to see some of Illinois
Beach’s resident butterflies. This preserve provides a patchwork
of prairie, wetlands, and sandy beach, attracting a variety of species. Of
particular note are the Appalachian
brown and Olympia
marblewing. This site is also the only place in Illinois to see the hoary
elfin, which favors the park’s oak savanna.
Bluff Spring Fen
Cook County, IL
Visit this nature
preserve in early June and July, when you’re more likely to see
the butterfly gems of the fen areas. With its best wetlands on the eastern
side, this site is home to more than 50 species of butterfly, including the Baltimore
checkerspot, mulberrywing
skipper, and swamp
metalmark — an endangered species extinct in the area until a breeding
project by the Notebaert Nature Museum reintroduced the species.
Bluff Spring Fen
Photo: Willard Clay
Gensburg-Markham Prairie
Cook County, IL
Designated a National Natural Landmark, this
restored site will transport you back in time to when the region flourished
with tall grasses. Walking through the high-quality prairie you’re sure
to spot dozens of skipper species and Aphrodite
fritillaries.
Indiana Dunes
Porter County, IN
On the southern tip of Lake Michigan, the beachfront, dunes, and marshland
of both Indiana
Dunes State Park and the Indiana
Dunes National Lakeshore create microclimates that support unique plant
species found nowhere else in the region — and butterflies that rely on
them almost exclusively. Large swatches of sassafras trees here, for example,
feed resident spicebush
swallowtail. Stands of lupine likewise support the federally endangered Karner
blue butterfly. Unlike many butterflies, the Karner breeds twice a year,
in early summer and in August.
Waterfall Glen
DuPage County, IL
A rugged terrain sets this
butterfly site apart from others. Here you can view a variety of woodland
butterflies as you traverse the trails that circle Argonne National Laboratory.
In late spring and early summer, see hobomok
skippers surfing the air above common milkweed or viper’s bugloss.
Another site staple: the pipevine
swallowtail, which normally thrives farther south.
Iroquois County Conservation Area
Iroquois County, IL
Along the southern edge of Chicago Wilderness, this sandy oak woodland
is home to some of the area’s most uncommon butterfly species. Hiking
trails are few, but with a bit of off-trail walking, you can track down such
species as the silver-bordered
fritillary or the Indian
skipper.
— Laura Semko