📖 Read & Listen Free
When Dr. Reyes announced that the class would track monarch butterfly migration for their fall science project, most students thought it would be easy. You look up butterflies and write it down, someone said. It turned out to be much more complicated and much more interesting than that.
Lily and her partner James were assigned to research the biology of migration itself — not just where the butterflies went, but how they knew to go there. The question seemed simple until they started reading and discovered that nobody fully understood the answer.
Monarch butterflies fly up to three thousand miles from Canada to a small mountain forest in Mexico. They have never made the trip before — the generation that migrates is four generations removed from the last one that made the journey. Yet they find the exact same trees.
Scientists believe they use the angle of sunlight as a compass, corrected by an internal clock. They may also sense the Earth's magnetic field. Some researchers think they even navigate by the polarization of light that human eyes cannot perceive.
Lily stayed up one night reading studies on her tablet, genuinely unable to stop. James filled three pages of notes. At school the next day they could not talk about anything else, which annoyed their other friends but delighted Dr. Reyes.
For their presentation, they built a giant paper mural showing the migration route, with arrows marking the waypoints. They hung orange paper butterflies from the ceiling above the mural using fishing line so they appeared to be flying.
During the presentation, James explained the navigation science while Lily showed the route. Then Lily asked the class a question she had not been able to stop thinking about: If the butterfly has never made this journey before, and its parents have never made it, what is carrying the memory? The class was quiet for a long time.
Dr. Reyes told them that was one of the great questions of biology — a question still being studied at universities around the world. Lily wrote that sentence down in her notebook and underlined it. She thought that knowing the right questions might matter even more than knowing all the answers.