
Photo: YouTube screengrab
The surreal-looking cocoon of the Mechanitis polymnia butterfly has spawned all kinds of fake facts online. There are photos of these awe-inspiring pupae captioned with all sorts of lies, like they contain actual metallic particles, or that empty cocoons were once used as currency. That may seem plausible to some people, but science does a great job of debunking such myths. First of all, the cocoons don’t contain any metals. They are made of chitin, a natural substance that gives some insects and crustaceans a shiny look. It’s also what most fish scales are made of. As for its potential as currency, that would have made sense if not for the fact that the cocoons actually lose their gold-like shine in just a few days, a week tops.
“The butterflies are only in the pupal stage for around a week, depending on the species, afterwards they lose the metallic color,” Dr. Ryan Hill writes.
“They lose their metallic color almost immediately,” Costa Rica native Luis Ricardo Murillo-Hiller told Earth Touch. “I have never seen or heard of somebody, in any place, using the pupae as currency, and actually, they are almost to unknown to [the average person].”
Not to mention that empty chrysalises are extremely fragile, which doesn’t exactly make them ideal as currency, at least not the type that changes hands. That’s probably for the best though, or we’d have people scouring the jungle in search of them. This way, we can just admire their shiny beauty from afar.
Apparently, the the orange-spotted tiger clearwing isn’t the only butterfly to spawn out of a jewel like cocoon. Tithorea harmonia, or the Harmonia tiger wing, has very similar cocoons, as you can see in the video above.