Dine & Draw at Penang Butterfly Farm’s Papilio Cafe

, June 15, 2009

Mummy, look at my drawing...

Mummy, look at my drawing...

Creativity and expressive!

Creativity and expressive!

The little ones from Starbright Kindergarten, Chai Leng Park & Simpang Ampat Centre putting out their love and passion on drawing at Penang Butterfly Farm’s Dine & Draw Session.

Posted in Butterflies, Food, Latest News, Mother Nature, Photos |

Dine with Butterflies at Papilio Cafe!

, June 13, 2009

Have you ever catch a sight of a Rajah Brooke butterfly while sipping coffee? Finding a place to unwind for the weekend?

Those of you who might have visited us lately would have realised that our new Papilio Cafe is now open and you can have a meal or perhaps just coffee with butterflies fluttering beside you. Papilio Cafe being located inside of the Penang Butterfly Farm is a relaxing place for visitors or tourists to enjoy food yet a chance to observe nature. Local dishes such as Nasi Lemak or Chicken Rendang are served here as well.

Apart from enjoying our natural garden with butterflies, we offer great packages for kids & families as well such as Butterfly Birthday Bash (with a FREE mystery insect gift for the birthday child), Hand & Face Painting, Caterpillar Egg Hunt Game, The Wild Wild Guess Game (I like this game!), Insect Petting Session, Pebble Painting Workshop, Butterfly Release and many more! To make a booking, please call Ms Chong / Ms Kyra o4-885-1253.

Papilio Cafe is Now Open!

Papilio Cafe is Now Open!


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Posted in Butterflies, Food, Latest News |

Can 2 different species of butterflies mate with each other?

, April 30, 2009

I wonder if this could be an evolutionary process where a new biological species may arise. For more than over 20 years we have been around, our field lepidopterist claimed to have not seen this before. Look what we have found recently:

Can two butterfly species mate with each other?

Can two different butterfly species mate with each other? What do you think?

These 2 species of butterfly have been found mating in our farm late evening yesterday. The male is a Cethosia cyane, while the female is the Parantica aspasia. Could this be just an accident in nature? Or can nature or its surrounding force the butterflies to change their behaviour? Possibly, studies have found that behavioural changes in plants and animals can occur as the environment changes. So how has the environment change? What else might be the cause for this?

4 hours later: I googled further into this and realised that speciation can occur in butterflies, and it has been simulated in laboratory before. Our senior lepidopterist also did confirm that this was possible previously through random pairings of  Heliconius butterflies, but limited to butterflies in the same genus.

Click here to read about the the speciation of a Heliconius hybrid. I can say that the butterflies in the genus of Heliconius are a truly advanced species. I might cover more about that at a later stage.

If you have anything to share about this, please feedback to us at our forum:
http://butterfly-insect.com/blog/naturetalk/index.php/topic,370.0.html


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Posted in Butterflies, Latest News |

A Butterfly Garden Opens At Changi T3 Airport

, September 4, 2008

On Thursday, 28 August 2008, Singapore Changi Airport – the World’s Best Airport opened The World’s First Butterfly Garden In An Airport. Conceptualised by Butterfly House Consultancy Sdn Bhd, a subsidiary of Penang Butterfly Farm, the butterfly garden is designed to be a tropical nature retreat for passengers of Changi Airport Terminal 3’s Departure and Transit Mall to have a quick rest and relax from travelling. It is home to more than 1,000 free flying singapore butterflies, and close to 50 butterfly species native to Singapore and Malaysia were specifically selected to be bred in the butterfly garden.

The two-storey open-air enclosed garden is protected by a curved-shaped roof made out of high quality stainless steel mesh and unique glass windows, facing Changi Airport’s large airfield. It was designed in this manner to keep the butterflies in, maintaining exchange of wind and natural air which is vital to the survival of butterflies while maximising the butterflies’ flight activity.

Visitors walking inside this enclosure can view and enjoy the beautiful scenary of a waterfall which keeps the garden cool even at noon, and traversing a garden on timber walkway, the feeling being close to nature with exotic jungle plants and an unimaginable sight of colourful butterflies.

The media claimed that it is the most beautiful event that they had covered for Changi Airport. Mrs Lim Hwee Hua, Senior Minister of State for Finance and Transport who officially launched the butterfly garden, said:

“The Butterfly Garden is a unique attraction designed to complement Terminal 3’s nature theme and Singapore’s tropical garden image. Passengers will have a tranquil haven offering a respite from the stresses of traveling.”

Changi Butterfly Garden Official Opening

Butterfly Garden Opens At Changi T3 Airport

The technical representative from Butterfly House Consultancy Sdn Bhd further advised that each plant has been carefully choosen for each butterfly species survival. In a garden like this, the butterflies are actually living in a “butterfly paradise” as they can easily find nectar and thrive in the abscence of predators, therefore they have longer life-span and naturally, very friendly to humans.

Changi Butterfly Garden Opening

T3 Changi Butterfly Garden Inside View

Changi Butterfly Garden at T3 Opened To Visitors

A stairway is to be found leading to the second level, where it brings visitors deeper into their imagination. As visitors watch closely on the leafs of plants on the balcony, creatures that are almost hidden emerge before one’s eyes causing a surprise. It seems the garden not only keeps butterflies alive, but alive with creatures of camouflage such as stick insects and leaf insects. The sight from the butterfly garden’s balcony is absolutely relaxing for its visitors; standing at the height of its waterfall, one can feel in awe with its beauty.

Changi Butterfly Garden 2nd Level & Balcony

Night View of Changi Butterfly Garden

Related links:
Butterfly House Consultancy Website
Changi Airport Colours Website


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Posted in Butterflies, Habitat, Latest News, Plants & Flowers |

Butterfly World UK – The World’s Largest Butterfly Dome

, April 28, 2008

An amazing plan for a giant butterfly dome has been revealed to the world to saving UK’s butterflies and their habitat…
Our dear friend, Clive Farrell, who is a butterfly enthusiast once said “I wanted to build one more butterfly house but on a gigantic scale and incorporating everything I have learned in 30 years about butterflies and the idea of a massive dome emerged. ”

The largest butterfly house or dome in the world, founded by Clive Farrell, will be built in a 26-acre site Chiswell Green, St. Albans, Hertfordshire in Great Britain. It will boast a collection of approximately 10,000 tropical butterflies consisting of 250 different species in a 300 foot wide complex.

Some of the more interesting planned sections of Butterfly World are caterpillar gardens, chrysalis pond, spiral proboscis walk and nectar gardens. The biome and walkthrough experience will include reproduced Mayan ruins and rainforest. This £25m world-class visitor attraction which opens in 2009 till 2011 in few phases, is expected to attract about 1 million visitors a year where 40% of them are children.

Butterfly World

3D impression of Butterfly World UK from the sky. Image is courtesy of The Independent.

The aim of this butterfly dome is to raise immediate awareness of the current threats to the world’s butterfly and moth population and educate the public on conserving all flora and fauna in this world. This project will also largely help towards funding the organisations that care for and preserve the natural environment, which will benefit the public in return, as 10% of Butterfly World’s annual profit will be donated to the Butterfly World Trust to invest into research, conservation and community projects.

Clive also said “More than three quarters of British butterfly species have declined in the last 20 years, some of them very rapidly. That is worrying, not least because these declines indicate an underlying deterioration of the environment as a whole. For the sake of future generations we must take action now. Butterfly World is doing just that. It is putting the issues on the agenda and is seeking to help reverse this environmental catastrophe.”

David Bellamy - Clive Farrell - Sir David Attenborough

From left to right, David Bellamy - botanist, environmental campaigner and broadcaster, Clive Farrell - world renown lepidopterist and Sir David Attenborough - broadcaster and naturalist.

Dear Clive, we thank you for continuous inspiration to us.

“Making butterfly spotting accessible gets people in touch with nature. Butterflies are essential indicators of the health of the environment, as well as being beautiful and quite wonderful to watch. It’s an honour to be recognised for doing something I love.” said Clive.

Butterflies are continuing to lose their habitat not only in the UK but also every part of the world. Here are some facts about butterflies in the UK alone:

  • During the 20th century, 5 butterfly species (in Great Britain) and 60 moth species became extinct!
  • Losses of butterfly species have outstripped those of birds and plants!
  • The number of butterfly species on the priority endangered species list has more than doubled in twelve years, rising from 11 butterflies and 53 moths in 2005 to 24 butterflies and over 150 moths in 2007!
  • The Large Blue or Maculinea arion – the UK’s largest and rarest blue butterfly became extinct in the British Isles in 1979!

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Posted in Butterflies, Habitat, Latest News |