Dan Marschalek marks a Regal Fritillary butterfly with a felt tip pen at the Friendly Prairie conservation area near Sedalia.
Dan Marschalek marks a Regal Fritillary butterfly with a felt tip pen at the Friendly Prairie conservation area near Sedalia. (Courtesy | G10 Creative)

Butterfly Effect: Dan Marschalek is More Than a Collector

October 12, 2022  |  G10 Creative  |  1 min read

Dan Marschalek’s fascination with butterflies began innocently enough. He just wanted to collect as many different types as possible.

Then he learned the crucial role butterflies play as pollinators in sustaining life as we know it.

Today, he is an associate professor of insect ecology at the University of Central Missouri.

“I think we take for granted that the insects are there doing their job,” Marschalek said. “But now we’re realizing that their decline is potentially putting those ecosystem functions at risk.”

Watch the attached video as Marschalek goes on a hunt for the Regal Fritillary, a gorgeous but declining butterfly, in the Friendly Prairie conservation area near Sedalia. Marschalek regards such butterflies as “canaries in the coal mine” in terms of ecological sustainability. 

To learn more about what you can do to help sustain the butterfly population, read the story below.

Reading these stories is free, but telling them is not. Start your monthly gift now to support Flatland’s community-focused reporting.

Nick’s Picks | Messi, Jail, Buses, and More …

June 1, 2026

World Cup Team(s) Arrive It’s starting to feel real. The first World Cup team has landed in Kansas City. Defending champions Argentina touched down at KCI airport on Sunday and will begin practicing today at Sporting KC’s training facility in Wyandotte County. Much of the attention, of course, is focused on Lionel Messi. The soccer…

Related Stories

The End of the Pesticide Arms Race?

To spray or not to spray, that’s the question for farmers. Pests can be the make-or-break factor for a season’s harvest. Between 20% to 40% of global crop production is lost to pests annually, according to the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations. Conventional chemical pesticides have traditionally addressed this challenge, but their…

Read More >
Augochlora pura, the Pure Golden Green Sweat Bee, rests on a yellow coneflower in the MU Extension Garden at Burr Oak Woods Conservation Area outside of Kansas City on July 23, 2025. The pure golden green bee can be seen pollinating flowers from April to October. (Abigail Landwehr | Flatland)

Hundreds of Bee Species Face Decline in Missouri and Kansas

To Tom Schroeder, every bee is a work of art.  His own words, backed up with hundreds of photos in his camera roll from the prairies and woods of Kansas City WildLands. With more than two decades of volunteering with the group, he’s become a bee enthusiast– but not an expert, he’ll clarify. “We’re the…

Read More >
Investors have offered to buy the Kansas City Board of Public Utilities’ defunct Quindaro Power Station and develop a data center on the site. (Vaughn Wheat/The Beacon)

Developers eye idle KCK power plant as the region pursues data center projects

A defunct Kansas City, Kansas, power station astride polluted land has caught the eye of investors eager to develop an energy-hungry data center. The investors have offered to pay millions of dollars for the environmental remediation of the Kansas City Board of Public Utilities’ defunct Quindaro Power Station — and then some. The Unified Government…

Read More >