Roanoke Times Copyright (c) 1995, Landmark Communications, Inc. DATE: THURSDAY, May 25, 1995 TAG: 9505250015 SECTION: EXTRA PAGE: 3 EDITION: METRO SOURCE: JOEL ACHENBACH DATELINE: LENGTH: Medium
A: It's so ostentatious. A caterpillar is a fine little creature all by itself. Why metamorphose? There seems to be no obvious reason it shouldn't continue to be a caterpillar, find a caterpillar mate and have lots of baby caterpillars.
Instead it goes through this wild, garish, hysterical transformation into a winged insect.
The reason: It allows the creature to exist in two different habitats. (You may now smack your forehead in the international gesture of I-knew-that.)
Caterpillars eat leaves. Butterflies drink flower nectar. One generation doesn't compete against its offspring for the same supply of food. The young and old remain independent. (The Social Security system is based on a similar concept.)
``It allows the insect to exploit completely different resources as an adult versus a caterpillar,'' says Don Harvey, a zoologist at the Smithsonian Institution.
We asked him what the creature is officially called. Is it a caterpillar that becomes a butterfly or is it a butterfly that dithers around for a while as a caterpillar?
He said it's a butterfly. Always. First it's a ``butterfly egg.'' Then a tiny little butterfly larva hatches - that's the caterpillar. It gnaws on stuff and gets bigger, doing a lot of nutritional ``leg work,'' dare we say. Eventually, the caterpillar attaches itself to something, spins a cocoon of silk around itself, gets very still and undergoes the transformation into a pupa.
The pupa essentially forms inside the larva. The skin of the caterpillar splits, and the squishy pupa inside hardens with exposure to air.
Now you have a creature that can't move and has no mouth parts, no legs, just a protective shell - it's how the presidency would be if designed by the Secret Service. Inside this thing, the adult forms. What had been the caterpillar's eyes are reabsorbed. So too are the internal organs recycled. There is a complete metamorphosis. The adult emerges and gradually spreads its wings.
``It's really quite a miraculous process, because what happens is basically there's a complete breakdown and rebuilding up of the structures, the internal structures, and also the external structures, during the pupa stage,'' says Harvey.
Other creatures do the same thing. Moths, flies, bees, wasps. But the thing about caterpillars is that they are more impressive than the larvae of most other metamorphosing creatures. For example, a fly larva is a maggot. We are not so impressed by the desire of a maggot to transform itself into something better.
The Mailbag
Swanson S., of Clare, Mich., wants to know how credit cards are validated by store clerks. ``Where is this electronic wizardry accomplished? Is there a central clearinghouse?''
Dear Swanson: Glad you asked. The Why staff always worries about centralization of power. If there was one clearinghouse for all credit card purchases, it would be too easy for a madman to take it over. He could threaten to cancel every card in America. We would have no choice but to agree to let him be the official Ruler Of The Planet.
But fortunately there's no central clearinghouse. We can tell you what happens with a Visa card because they sent us a diagram. The merchant swipes your card through a gadget. Your number goes to a Visa switchboard of sorts (``Visanet''). The information is directed to the bank that issued you the card in the first place. The bank's computer then sends the approval or rejection back through the switchboard to the merchant.
The point is, it's a decentralized process. Lots of banks are checking up on people at any given moment. Bad news for world-domination-craving madmen.
- Washington Post Writers Group
Joel Achenbach writes for the Style section of The Washington Post.
by CNB