On first acquaintance, the Apollo butterfly seems improbably ethereal for a harbinger of breakthrough technology. A scant two inches from wing tip to wing tip, it flaunts a bold delicacy of design more Miro than Microsoft, the wings translucent white flecked with glowing circles and confident brushstrokes of crimson, black, and brown. And striking though it is in close-up, Apollo (or, officially, Parnassius sminthius) is an easy creature to overlook outdoors. It lives in isolated upland meadows, surviving largely on one inconspicuous low-growing alpine plant, called stonecrop.
Yet for the past two summers, a few of these unpretentiously elegant creatures have been fluttering around the Kananaskis Range of Alberta’s Canadian Rockies outfitted like trend-crazed backpackers with the latest, the lightest, and the techiest of equipment; milligram for milligram, it’s also the priciest. The butterflies carry tiny radar probes that allow University of Alberta ecologist Jens Roland and his colleagues to ...