Wheelchair-bound and ravaged by multiple sclerosis, 68-year-old John McArthur vividly recalls the first time he saw a butterfly.
He was 10 years old and it was a shock of yellow and black, a swallowtail butterfly flitting among the zinnia flowers in his mother's New York garden.
"I was mesmerised", McArthur says, recounting the first step of a journey that would take him from the Amazon to the Himalayas, the Andes back to his native New Zealand.
Over nearly 60 years, he collected more than 20,000 specimens, a kaleidoscope of colour and life that he painstakingly pinned into hundreds of boxes that lined the walls of his home.
McArthur also remembers the last time he caught a butterfly.
It was during a 2008 visit to the achingly beautiful Cobb Valley, in New Zealand's South Island.
He happened across a boulder copper butterfly. Quickly slinging aside his crutches, he dropped to his knees to scoop up the diminutive wonder.
Soon enough, that kind of effort would be too much.
By that time, he had already felt a tingling sensation in his spine. Doctors diagnosed multiple sclerosis, an incurable disease of the central nervous system.
"A specialist told me I would probably need a walking stick within 15 years," McArthur remembers. "But six months after the diagnosis, I was in a wheelchair."
The disease has now robbed McArthur of the use of his hands and legs, and his speech is laboured.
But his mind remains sharp, recalling specimen names and locations where he found his favourite butterflies.
- High price -
Faced with his own mortality, McArthur resolved to find the thousands of beloved butterfly specimens a new home, somewhere they could find a new life after his death.
He ruled out donating to a New Zealand museum: "They just don't have the facilities" he said.
"You need climate control, very rigorous pest control. Accepting a large collection has quite a price tag."
Instead, he chose the Natural History Museum in London, paying to ship his collection from Wellington to London this April.
"I had mixed emotions -- sad to see it go, but absolutely thrilled that it was going where it would be useful."
His Lepidoptera were merged into the museum's vast collection, which contains about 13.5 million butterflies, housed in 80,000 drawers.
Some of McArthur's favourites are now kept alongside specimens studied by Charles Darwin, the 19th-century naturalist who popularised the theory of evolution.
"For a collector, that's quite a big deal. It's humbling," McArthur added.
- Deadly viper -
The walls of the room that once housed his butterflies have now been torn down and the space converted into a laundry.
"I never went in there again once they were gone. It felt like a black hole," he said.
All that remains are a handful of butterflies he couldn't bear to part with.
They include a box of startlingly colourful specimens from Indonesia, a riot of orange, red, yellow, neon blue and bone white
McArthur disliked killing the butterflies -- harming the thing he loved.
"It's never nice" -- and the best method was crushing the thorax where the wings join the body -- "they die instantly".
"If I enter Buddhist hell, I'm sure I'll end up with thousands of pins through me," he said.
But the New Zealander's eyes light up when discussing some of the mischief his collecting caused.
As a child, he once cut the lining of his mother's gown to make a butterfly net.
"I didn't catch anything. The material was too stiff, but she was understanding of my passion."
Eventually, he followed in his father's footsteps becoming a diplomat, allowing exploration in several continents.
In the Peruvian rainforest, he had a dangerous brush with a bushmaster viper -- one of the world's most venomous snakes.
His greatest find -- a white female Hypsochila -- which lives only in the high Andes also came with trouble.
After netting the rare specimen, he was questioned by Chilean police, who accused him of consorting with smugglers.
"They said the person who took me up there was a gun runner. The police let me go, but that was a pretty close call."
His husband and now carer James Hu, who McArthur met in the 1990s when posted in Shanghai, became an accomplice on hunts.
With a chuckle, Hu recalled how he once nervously kept watch for monks from a Buddhist temple while McArthur scoured a nearby field for Chinese peacock butterflies in the foothills of the Himalayas.
If he had his time again, McArthur said he would rather help protect, not collect, butterflies.
"I'd be more interested in breeding -- doing whatever it might take to enhance the protection of their habitat."
Viral pygmy hippo proves cash cow for Thai zoo
Bangkok (AFP) Sept 26, 2024 -
An endangered baby pygmy hippo that shot to social media stardom in Thailand has become a lucrative source of income for her home zoo, quadrupling its ticket sales, the institution said Thursday.
Moo Deng, whose name in Thai means "bouncy pork", has drawn tens of thousands of visitors to Khao Kheow Open Zoo this month.
The two-month-old pygmy hippo went viral on TikTok and Instagram for her cheeky antics, inspiring merch, memes and even craft tutorials on how to make crocheted or cake-based Moo Dengs at home.
A zoo spokesperson told AFP that ticket sales from the start of September to Wednesday reached almost 19.2 million baht ($590,000) -- more than four times the same period last year.
Fans from all over the world have queued for hours outside her enclosure, forcing keepers to limit Moo Deng observation time to five minutes each.
The zoo has set up a round-the-clock livestream of the hippo's enclosure to ease waiting times and for fans who cannot visit in person.
It is also hoping Moo Deng fever spurs further merchandise sales, launching a pygmy hippo-themed T-shirt line last week. At 300 baht, or $9 a pop, it is currently only available at the zoo itself.
"We have outsourced a company to help us produce Moo Deng products, like T-shirts and trousers," said the zoo's spokesperson, adding any Moo Deng-generated profits would go towards improving facilities for all the zoo's animals, not just its star moneymaker.
"Income will be used to maintain the zoo."
The hype has prompted animal rights group PETA to post a statement on its website saying "there's nothing cute about a baby being born in captivity".
Endangered pygmy hippos are native to West Africa, and there are only an estimated 2,000-2,500 left in the world, according to the IUCN.
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