
Sunday, March 22, 2026· 10.4471, -75.2617
Butterfly and papaya, a spontaneous alliance
By Michel Salas
That Sunday in March, Michel Salas was walking through the sanctuary when a papaya flower stopped him in his tracks. The plant — a *Carica papaya* of the family Caricaceae — was in full bloom, its flowers open and fertile beneath the deep blue sky of ten in the morning. Perched among them, a butterfly that Michel identified as *Parides photinus* was carrying out its ancient office: moving from flower to flower laden with pollen, unhurried, with the quiet precision of one who has done the same thing for millions of years.
A few steps further, another discovery caught him off guard: a chili plant (*Capsicum sp.*) that no one had sown, growing wild among the tropical vegetation, its small green fruits still firm and tight, peeking out between glossy leaves. Beside a rustic palm structure, the plant had decided on its own that this was its place. At Fundación Loros, nature sometimes doesn't wait to be asked.


Stay in touch
Get news from the reserve
Before-and-after photos, management protocols, events and the story of each individual — straight to your inbox.
