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         Butterflies:     more books (100)
  1. The Diving-bell and the Butterfly by Jean-Dominique Bauby, 2002-05-07
  2. In the Time of the Butterflies by Julia Alvarez, 1995-08-01
  3. Fancy Nancy: Bonjour, Butterfly (Fancy Nancy) by Jane O'connor, 2008-02-01
  4. Obsidian Butterfly (An Anita Blake, Vampire Hunter, Book 9) (Anita Blake, Vampire Hunter) by Laurell K. Hamilton, 2000-01-01
  5. From Caterpillar to Butterfly(Let's-Read-and-Find-Out Science, Stage 1) by Deborah Heiligman, 1996-05-31
  6. M. Butterfly. by David Henry Hwang, 1998-01
  7. I Never Saw Another Butterfly by Hana Volavkova, 1994-03-15
  8. Color Me Butterfly by L. Y. Marlow, 2007-02-05
  9. The Butterfly
  10. Good Night, Sweet Butterflies (Mini Edition): A Color Dreamland by Dawn Bentley, 2007-01-09
  11. Are You a Butterfly? (Backyard Books) by Judy Allen, Tudor Humphries, 2003-05-16
  12. Costa Rica Butterflies & Moths: An Introduction to Familiar Species (Pocket Naturalist - Waterford Press) by James Kavanagh, 2007-10-01
  13. A World Of Butterflies by Kjell Sandved, Brian Cassie, 2004-05-05
  14. My, Oh My--A Butterfly!: All About Butterflies (Cat in the Hat's Lrning Libry) by Tish Rabe, 2007-03-27

1. Butterflies Of North America
Information on hundreds of species of butterflies occurring in the United States or northern Mexico, including distribution maps, county checklists, species accounts, and fullsized and thumbnail
http://www.npwrc.usgs.gov/resource/distr/lepid/bflyusa/bflyusa.htm

2. Where Do Butterflies Come From?
Fun and interactive site to help kids appreciate science. Five activities adapted from science and children's museums. From the Howard Hughes Medical Institute. animal that's very differentthe butterfly. butterflies go through four life stages, and they look very to look like antennae. butterflies use these "feelers" to learn about their
http://www.hhmi.org/coolscience/butterfly
Ever wonder where a butterfly comes from? It comes from a chrysalis (KRIS-uh-liss) which is also called a pupa. A chrysalis looks like a tiny leathery pouch. You can find one underneath some leaves in the summer.
Here's what you need:
  • Toilet-paper tube
  • Tongue depressor or ice-cream pop stick
  • Heavy paper
  • 6" (150 mm) piece of pipe cleaner, folded in half
  • Markers or crayons
  • Scissors and glue
Here's what you do: Cut out and color a butterfly from the heavy paper. Use any colors, but make both halves look the same. Put a small hole at the top of the butterfly's head. Color the toilet paper tube to look like a chrysalis. (A monarch butterfly's chrysalis is green, but you can use any color.) Take a piece of pipe cleaner and shape it like the letter "V". Put one point through the little hole in the butterfly's head and then twist it to look like antennae. Butterflies use these "feelers" to learn about their environment. Glue the butterfly to one end of the tongue depressor or ice-cream pop stick. Let the glue dry. Curl the butterfly's wings and slide it into the chrysalis.

3. Your Title Here
butterflies. The Magazine for survivors of incest, sexual abuse, and ritual abuse who have reclaimed their lives butterflies are free and that's what survivors strive to be free of
http://www.drwnet.com/bfly
Butterflies
The Magazine for survivors of incest, sexual abuse, and ritual abuse who have reclaimed their lives. Statistics show that one out of three women in this country have been the victim of sexual abuse. One of those three was a victim of ritual abuse. Statistics show that one out of seven men in this country have been the victim of sexual abuse. Many of those were also victims of ritual abuse. Estimated therapy time for sexual abuse victims is two to ten years. It's not easy. It's not fast. It's never actually over. The best a survivor can do is to reclaim his/her life, reclaim his/her personal power and release him/herself from the hold the past events had on him/her. It is possible. It can be done. Butterflies are free and that's what survivors strive to be...free of the past, free of the pain, free of the guilt, free of the burdens they grew up with. Free from living in the darkness and fear. In Butterflies you will read about many different ways of healing and how they may be able to help you. In Butterflies, you may take your first step out in the world by submitting an article, a picture, a poem, a story of hope and encouragement. Butterflies is for hope, not for staying stuck in the darkness. Butterflies is for encouraging each other. Supporting each other. Butterflies is for us, the Survivors. The ones who've caught sight of the light and are living in it. Butterflies is for flying free of the past.

4. The Children's Butterfly Site
Kids can learn all about butterflies and moths at this site. It includes a coloring page with the life cycle of the Monarch, and a gallery of pictures.
http://www.mesc.usgs.gov/resources/education/butterfly/bfly_start.asp
Home Jobs About FORT ... Education Butterfly
The Children's Butterfly Site
Top of Page Butterfly Home Photographs Life Cycle ... FAQ Search FORT Staff Directory Science Programs Product Library Science Features ...
U.S. Geological Survey

2150 Centre Avenue, Bldg C
Fort Collins, CO 80526-8118
URL: http://www.fort.usgs.gov/
Last Modified:
Web Coordinator: Lance Everette FORT Questions and Comments Privacy Freedom of Information Act Accessibility

5. ThinkQuest : Library : Butterflies - On The Wings Of Freedom
Information about butterflies for students, including high speed shooting and scanning electron microscope pictures, articles about butterflies at school, conservation, bionics, butterfly gardening, and butterfly legends
http://library.thinkquest.org/C002251/index2.shtml
Index Life Science Insects
Butterflies - On the Wings of Freedom
Many people find butterflies very beautiful, but hardly anybody knows how these marvels are constructed. Therefore, our entry provides thorough, broad and brand-new information about butterflies, because the more people know about the wonders of nature, the more they are determined to save it. Visit Site 2000 ThinkQuest Internet Challenge Awards Gold Languages Chinese German Students Rhomel Mt. Carmel High School, San Diego, CA, United States Stephanie Diocesan Girls' School, Hong Kong, Hong Kong Stefanie Moerike-Gymnasium, 73773 Aichwald, Germany Coaches Jack Diocesan Girls' School, Hong Kong, Hong Kong Detlef Mt. Carmel High School, Plochingen, Germany Want to build a ThinkQuest site? The ThinkQuest site above is one of thousands of educational web sites built by students from around the world. Click here to learn how you can build a ThinkQuest site. Privacy Policy

6. Butterflies - North American Butterfly Association
Canada, United States, and Mexico) interested in butterflies. We are a membershipbased and developing educational programs about butterflies for schools and park rangers and
http://www.naba.org/
Hot Topics
ButterflyBuzz
(NABA Online Store)
NABA-CHAT

Longtails

South Florida Butterfly Survey

Rio Grande Prix of Butterflying
...
Butterflies I've Seen Web Site

(Sightings Database/Life List)
Recent Sightings

Employment Opportunities

North American Butterfly Images
Binoculars for Butterflying ... Additional Menu Items The North American Butterfly Association (NABA) is, by far, the largest group of people in North America (Canada, United States, and Mexico) interested in butterflies. We are a membership-based not-for-profit organization working to increase public enjoyment and conservation of butterflies. We are working to save butterfly species throughout North America (recent grants have helped the endangered Schaus' Swallowtail in Florida and contributed to developing a long term survival plan for Monarchs) and developing educational programs about butterflies for schools and park rangers and naturalists. NABA has convinced the U.S. Army to conduct further studies before implementing a plan that would destroy the last known colony of Regal Fritillaries east of the Mississippi River. Our publications are changing the way people view butterflies, teaching them how to find butterflies, how to identify them, how to create successful butterfly gardens, and how to photograph them. Your involvement with butterflies will help to bring beauty and satisfaction to your life.

7. Butterflies Section Of Wildlifewebsite.com-The Place To Find Out About Wildlife
Short articles of a few rare North American species, small photo gallery, and world butterfly and moth links.
http://www.wildlifewebsite.com/butterflies/
Look at our featured animals Mammals
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and its licensors. All rights reserved.
new ecards links Link to Butterfly Guy website.
BUTTERFLIES
Butterflies are beautiful and delicate insects. They undergo an amazing metamorphosis from a worm like caterpillar that eats plants, into a gorgeous creature that flits from flower to flower in search of nectar. Butterflies despite their delicate nature are enormously complicated creatures which often have tremendously complicated ecological requirements. Our latest addition is a world guide to butterfly and moth websites.

8. Otters And Butterflies
Highly educational and of value to schools, packed with interactivity, kids section, workbooks, conservation tips and facts about the butterfly lifecycle. Dual site of a local tourist attraction, Dartmoor Otters and Buckfast Butterfly Farm, in Devon, England.
http://www.ottersandbutterflies.co.uk
otters and butterflies
is an entertaining, educational site based on the otters and butterflies at its sanctuary tourist attraction in Buckfastleigh, Devon. Workbooks for schools, beautiful otter and butterfly photos, kids activities.
Otter and butterfly conservation
Conservation tips abound, hints on how to make your garden more attractive to wild butterflies, and how to help wild otters survive. Otters and Butterflies is a major tourist attraction in Buckfastleigh, Devon, it operates a keen conservation policy to the wild creatures and animals it offers sanctuary. click here for otter conservation
click here for butterfly conservation
click here for otters gallery 1
click here for otters gallery 2
click here for butterflies gallery 2
click here for butterflies gallery 3
Devon tourist attraction
What better way to spend your leisure time than at this wildlife park which has as its theme, otters and butterflies, but which also hosts a range of other wild insects and mini-beasts. If you are on holiday, come and watch the otters swimming under water.
Schools
Otters and butterflies is of great educational value and offers educational content for schools. Beautiful photos of the otters and butterflies, together with information on exotic ants, terrapins, birds, love-birds, moths.

9. Butterfly Links - The Butterfly WebSite - Butterfly Photos, Butterfly Clipart, E
Checklists. butterflies of Andorra butterflies of Cumberland County, New Jersey Great list of species population status. butterflies
http://butterflywebsite.com/resource/index.cfm
Tiffany Butterflies
Butterflies for

All Occasions

Organizations
...
Images
Checklists
Butterflies of Andorra Butterflies of Cumberland County, New Jersey
Great list of species' population status.
Butterflies of the Maltese Islands Butterflies of North Dakota Butterflies of Singapore Butterflies of the U.S. - extensive list Catalog of the Butterflies of the French Antilles Moths of the U.S. Nova Scotia Butterfly Checklist Texas Gulf Coast Butterflies
Images
Oscar Gutierrez Bill's Butterfly Photos Butterflies and Moths Butterfly and Moth Photos ... Captain's European Butterflies Page
Many beautiful photographs of European butterflies.
European Butterflies Finnish Macrolepidoptera on The World Wide Web
Fine photos, large files.
Habitat #16518
This is the home page of Lake Big Fish, a Backyard Wildlife Habitat certified by the National Wildlife Federation.
Images Unlimited
Bill Harris
Japanese Butterfly Photos Nature Photography by Andy Harmer ... Butterfly Photography - John P. Marechal

10. Nature.Net
Forums on bird watching, butterflies, herps, and miscellaneous outdoor activities.
http://www.nature.net/
Nature.Net W elcome to Nature.Net. Below is a listing of our current content. I f you would like to be added to our mailing list so you can hear about future updates to our site, simply fill in your email address below and click on the subscribe button. Your Email Address:
The Nature.Net Forums
My First Summer in the Sierra
Watercolors of North American Birds
Thank you for visiting Nature.Net!
Letters and Comments Mailing List Technical Problems

11. Butterfly Zone
Butterfly zone This World Wide Web (WWW) site is intended as an information and resource center for people interested in butterflies. It includes landscaping and planting information to help users
http://rdre1.inktomi.com/click?u=http://www.butterflies.com/&y=02CDCAD53370C

12. Butterflies And Moths
A website about the biology and ecology of butterflies and moths, it takes a look into their lives with a lot of spectecular pictures.
http://www.butterflies-moths.com/
This page uses frames, but your browser doesn't support them.

13. Home Page
Raises butterflies for release at special events. Includes contact information and products. Located in Winters, Texas.
http://www.butterflyoccasion.com/

14. Butterflies Of Texas
Information on numerous species of butterflies occurring in Texas, including distribution maps, species accounts, and species photos of adults and some larvae.
http://www.npwrc.usgs.gov/resource/distr/lepid/bflyusa/tx/toc.htm

15. Butterfly Zone - Where The Magic Is Just A Flutter Away
butterflies for all occasions and events including butterfly releases at weddings. Amazing butterflies, Welcome to our newly (still) being revised website.
http://www.butterflies.com/
Welcome to our newly (still) being revised website.
It will grow and change with your needs as time goes on
Butterfly Gardening
Shop our
New Store
Butterflies of ... FAQ
Frequently
Asked Questions Credits and Links What is a butterfly? Butterflies belong to the class Insecta.
With around one million named species and perhaps many more unnamed, insects account for a great majority of the species of animals on earth. Butterflies are in the order of insects called Lepidoptera.
With Lepidoptera is derived from the Latin word "lepido" which means scale + "ptera" which means wing. Butterflies have a head, thorax, abdomen, two antennae, six legs and a coiled proboscis for drinking liquids such as flower nectar. Butterflies have four wings that are usually covered by colored scales. Butterflies are very important in our world.
There are more than 20,000 different kinds of butterflies in the world.
With the majority being found in tropical environments. Butterflies are important as plant pollinators and as food for other animals (birds, mammals, spiders, and other insects). Butterflies are also very sensitive to changes in the environment, and help warn us about unhealthy changes that are taking place.

16. -- The Butterfly Guide --
Butterfly guide detailing relationships of host plants and nectar plants to butterflies and their US regions. Amazing butterflies,
http://www.butterflies.com/guide.html
THE ESSENTIAL BUTTERFLY GUIDE
"There is more to life than the Monarch"
There are hundreds of different types of butterflies around the world. In the United States,
you will find everything from beautiful colored moths and small garden varieties, to the
classic Swallowtails, Viceroys, and Monarchs. This guide highlights the most popular
butterflies and details which types of plants will serve to attract them to your garden.
This guide is divided into six regions defining the common range of each included species of butterfly Southeast
Desert Southwest
Pacific Coast
Midwest
High Plains New England
THE ESSENTIAL BUTTERFLY GUIDE
The Black Swallowtail (Papilio polyxenes) Favorite Flowers: Butterfly weed, phlox, clover, and thistle Caterpillar Plants: Carrots, parsley, dill, and celery Common Range: Southeast, Desert Southwest, Midwest, New England The Tiger Swallowtail (Papilio glaucus) Favorite Flowers: Butterfly bush, lilac, honeysuckle, and butterfly weed

17. Insects And More
Image galleries of butterflies, odonates, other insects, and other arthropods from Texas.
http://stephenville.tamu.edu/~fmitchel/insects/
Insect Image Gallery Nothing But Butterflies Dragonfly Museum Damselflies of Texas ... Center Home The major thrust of our web site has been to provide information about and images of dragonflies and damselflies of Texas. However, when we are in the field, opportunities to photograph or collect specimens for scanning often appear. Butterflies, moths, spiders, beetles, wasps, and other invertebrates can all make interesting subjects. We decided to add a web site called "Insects and More" to share some of the other interesting images we have collected while pursuing Odonata. And although everyone knows that butterflies are beautiful, many of the other invertebrates sport brilliant colors and intricate patterning. Enjoy the images - we will add more as opportunity allows.
Last updated August 29, 2002

18. Butterflies
butterflies. Of all the insects, none elicit pleasure and curiosity more readily than butterflies. Like the abundance of verdant mountains and beaches, butterflies are ever present during one's visit
http://www.centralamerica.com/cr/butterfly
B utterflies Of all the insects, none elicit pleasure and curiosity more readily than butterflies. Like the abundance of verdant mountains and beaches, butterflies are ever present during one's visit to Costa Rica. There is nowhere one goes, whether a 3,000 meter volcanic summit or the arid plains of Guanacaste where butterflies are not present. Costa Rica is unusually blessed by the diversity of it's butterflies. There exists about 20,000 butterfly species worldwide. Of these, about 1,000 or 5% can be found in Costa Rica. An Outline of Butterfly Physiology Butterflies are insects. By definition, all insects posses six legs and three body segments: head, thorax and abdomen. The three most salient features of the head are the antennae, the eyes and the proboscis. The antennae are used for balance in flight and olfactory sensation. Butterflies possess fragile wings. The wings can wear easily through normal use. They can also be badly damaged by predators which when attacking the butterfly grab only the wing rather than the body. Despite the loss of even the majority of their wing surface area, a butterfly will continue to be able to fly and navigate. They can do this because of the sense of balance afforded them by their antennae. The antennae are also useful for smell. Female butterflies release pheromones (like a perfume) into the air. The male butterflies of many species can detect the pheromones from as far away as 2 kilometers (over a mile). Depending on the concentration of the pheromones, the male will be able to find the female to mate with her. It's worth noting that some species of moths are sensitive to the presence of the females' pheromones up to five kilometers (about three miles) distant.

19. BUTTERFLIES OF POLAND
Nicholas Copernicus University, Torun.
http://motyle.biol.uni.torun.pl/eng/amotyle.htm
Wersja polskojÊzyczna tej strony DATABASE BUTTERFLIES OF POLAND
http://motyle.biol.uni.torun.pl/
Buszko Jaros³aw, Kartanas Edmund Nicholas Copernicus Uniwersity of ToruÑ Institute of Ecology and Environment Protection 87-100 ToruÑ, Gagarina 9, Poland
General information about database

Database on the distribution of butterflies in Poland

Identification of species
Software by: Maciej Koziñski Nicholas Copernicus Univerity, Uniwersity Computing Center This database was made accessible on Internet due to financial support by National Committee for Scientific Research (Grant 1217/DOT/DI/97)

20. Zoom Butterflies - Enchanted Learning Software
butterflies at Zoom School is all about butterflies, their anatomy, life cycles and reproduction, diet, senses, defense mechanisms, flying, etc.
http://www.enchantedlearning.com/subjects/butterfly/
Zoom Butterflies
Zoom Butterflies is a comprehensive on-line hypertext book about butterflies. It is designed for students of all ages and levels of comprehension. It has an easy-to-use structure that allows readers to start at a basic level on each topic, and then to progress to much more advanced information as desired, simply by clicking on links.
Butterfly Table of Contents

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