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Long Island Team Transplants Monarch Wing, Restores Flight in Viral Rescue

Sweetbriar Nature Center used a donor wing and simple materials to repair the insect in a procedure the center calls a first, a claim not yet verified by outside experts.

Overview

  • An injured monarch was brought to Sweetbriar Nature Center in Smithtown, where director of wildlife rehabilitation Janine Bendicksen performed the repair.
  • Staff matched a wing from a deceased monarch and attached it using contact cement, corn starch and a small wire after briefly refrigerating the butterfly to keep it still.
  • After the procedure, the butterfly was released and flew off, and video of the transplant has been widely shared online.
  • Sweetbriar has described the effort as unprecedented and says it is receiving inquiries from other regions, though independent confirmation of that claim and long‑term outcomes are unknown.
  • Coverage places the rescue in the context of monarchs’ long migrations and significant population declines reported by organizations such as the USDA and the IUCN.