White butterflies are filling Johannesburg's skies earlier than usual. Climate change is to blame
Published Date: 11/30/2022
Source: phys.org
Each year around mid-summer, somewhere between December and mid-January, the skies of South Africa's Gauteng province, including the city of Johannesburg, fill with small white butterflies. Some land in people's gardens, allowing a closer look at the thin brown markings on their wings. Those markings give the butterflies their name: the brown-veined white butterfly (Benenois aurota).