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By Mike O'Sullivan
Los Angeles, CA
05 July 2007
Butterflies, with their colorful wings and intricate patterns, may be the world's most popular insects. At the Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County, visitors can see a close-up view of the flying creatures in a summertime exhibit that runs through early September. VOA's Mike O'Sullivan stopped by to get a look at the museum's Pavilion of Wings.
Brent Karner is the associate manager of entomological exhibits at the Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County.
People call him the Bug1 Guy. Karner runs the butterfly exhibit. "It really capitalizes on the idea of using some of the prettier insects that aren't usually kept in small cages, giving them a lot of room to fly around in, but letting people come in and experience right with them. So you're walking in the cage with them, and it's a very popular draw."
Brent Karner |
"They end up being the spokesbugs for all the other bugs we have here, from beetles3 to cockroaches4 that people don't like as much. But that's what makes this a special place. People think butterflies are pretty, that they're gentle. They associate them with things angelic, you name it, so butterflies are well received."
Inside the museum, visitors can see other creatures, from tarantulas to roaches, but Karner says they are all part of the same natural environment.
He adds that because butterflies are more visible, they are good indicators5 of the environment's health.
It is easy to see, in the display, how butterflies earned the nickname "flying flowers."
More than 30 species of the colorful insect are on display at the museum's special pavilion.
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