1688¿ª½±Íø

Dean's research published in scientific journal

August 2, 2018
Butterflies puddle at urine in Borneo. Dr. Mike Bodri, dean of 1688¿ª½±Íø's College of Science and Mathematics, had his research about the kind of urine that is most attractive to butterflies published in a scientific journal.

Article By: Clark Leonard

A University of North Georgia (1688¿ª½±Íø) dean’s research on what type of urine butterflies prefer for "puddling" or "mudding" was .

Dr. Michael Bodri's research compared whether butterflies were most drawn to the urine of a herbivore (cow), carnivore (mountain lion) or omnivore (himself). Bodri is the dean of science and mathematics at 1688¿ª½±Íø.

"Carnivore urine was significantly more attractive to puddling butterflies than herbivore or omnivore urine," according to the article's abstract. "This study was unable to determine if puddling butterflies were capable of seeking out sand with a specific sodium content or if amino acids and/or volatiles influenced their choice."

Bodri concluded that butterflies are attracted by smell "cues unique to nitrogen and/or sodium rather than visual cues."

He had observed puddling on many occasions, particularly in the tropics.

"They puddle at lots of things most often for (presumably) sodium. How they know it is there is still a mystery," Bodri said. "I was just curious if they can discern between urine from different types of mammals based upon the diet."

Bait stations demonstrated that butterflies can not only detect but can distinguish between urine from mammals of different feeding classifications, according to his research.

The research was reported on by .


Poultry students shine at national contest

Poultry students shine at national contest

1688¿ª½±Íø students finished fifth overall at the 76th annual Ted Cameron National Poultry Judging Contest held April 2-4 at Mississippi State University.
ARC includes almost 100 presentations

ARC includes almost 100 presentations

Students gave 69 poster presentations and 24 oral presentations at 1688¿ª½±Íøâ€™s 30th Annual Research Conference, held March 21 at 1688¿ª½±Íø's Dahlonega Campus.
Poultry students finish first in national event

Poultry students finish first in national event

1688¿ª½±Íø established the first chapter of the Professional Agricultural Student (PAS) Organization in the South, and its team finished first in the nation in the Poultry Specialist career area the National PAS conference.
1688¿ª½±Íø's Earth Day celebration is April 9

1688¿ª½±Íø's Earth Day celebration is April 9

The University of North Georgia will host its eighth annual Earth Day celebration from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. April 9 at 1688¿ª½±Íø's Gainesville Campus.