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 Butterflies  are beautiful insects that fly. They have huge, colourful wings attached to  their bodies consisting of a head, thorax and abdomen, as well as antennae and  compound eyes.
 Like bees, butterflies are important to the ecosystem  because they are pollinators. Why then do people commercially exploit them?
 
 That the global turnover of the butterfly house  industry is USD 100 million proves that butterflies are grossly exploited by  breeding, exhibiting and trading.
 
 A butterfly house is actually a place that keeps  captive butterflies, moths and other insects. It is a place where they are  bred.
 
 Butterfly houses are growing in number in tropical  countries like India. They could be conservatories or farms. Both are bad. Conservatories,  lepidopterariums,  sanctuaries, parks, gardens, zoos, all pose risks to biodiversity; what’s more, butterfly farming is unethical.
 
 A few of the big butterfly  centres like the Butterfly Park in Bengaluru where they are being bred in India  are exploring ways of using butterflies as a resource to enhance  rural livelihood. Let’s hope it does not translate into butterflies being  supplied to be released at events.
 
 Other  centres in India are the Butterfly Park at Shimla, Butterfly Conservatory of  Ponda and the Ovalekar Wadi Butterfly Garden at Thane.
 
 In  December 2020 a 4-acre Pollinator Park was opened at Nainital’s Haldwani in  Uttarakhand, with 40 species of butterflies, honeybees, insects and birds. The  habitat created for the pollinator species had been developed by the Research  Wing of the Uttarakhand Forest Department with the objective of conserving them  and in order to create an awareness among the public of their importance because  1,80,000 different plant species existed due to them.
 
 BWC has drawn the attention of the  Government of India to foreign butterfly breeding kits being sold under the  category of toys & games by Amazon. They contain a mail-in coupon for 5  caterpillars/larvae of which 3 are expected to survive.
 
 Shockingly, butterflies can be ordered online abroad.  The spectacular Monarch is largely used by companies for butterfly releases, as  well as the Painted Lady. They are delivered frozen in ice packs and need to be  stored thus before they are released for an event such as a wedding or funeral.  Preserved (read dead) butterflies are used as decorations too. Farming,  hibernating, shipping and finally releasing them is cruel. Butterfly releases  are no different to bird releases. The captured creatures fly up into the sky  and eventually die due to some reason or another.
 
 Some  people opt for a compassionate way by using faux butterflies (made from rice paper) for  events. Guests open folded napkins containing these  faux paper butterflies  and they “flutter”  out! Bengali weddings usually display butterfly  motifs. That’s fine as long as no live butterflies are used.
 
 Another alternative for a compassionate  and environmentally friendly event such as a wedding is to shower rose petals or  toss confetti. One could even opt for alternatives such as floating fresh  flowers in a water-body as this does not cause harm to any living creature. If  rice is tossed it needs to be cleared else it attracts birds and others.
 
 Butterfly collections are no longer passé. But, the cruel trade in  butterflies continues. There are businesses that kill and turn butterflies and  bugs into items. Colourful and beautiful butterflies are converted into  jewellery and knick knacks, some encased or embedded in plastic or resin, some framed  behind glass. For example, “one-of-a-kind” pair of earrings and necklaces are made  with actual whole butterfly wings sandwiched between two thin pieces of glass  with metal shaped around.
 
 Butterfly ornaments, paper weights, pen stands  and key chains may look pretty, but not upon knowing that they represents capture,  torture and death. Another method is 24kt gold or silver dipped jewellery and  display items made by electroforming, a process that uses a matrix/mandrel  which could be a real butterfly, insect, flower, leaf or seashell. It is an  extremely cruel process because the delicate live creatures’ beauty is frozen  with a thin metal ‘skin’ on its entire surface. Insects such as dragonflies,  beetles and scorpions aren’t spared either – they too are killed and converted  into jewellery and other items.
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