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Sweetbriar Nature Center wildlife rehabilitation director performs wing transplant on monarch butterfly

A monarch butterfly with a wing that was bent and eventually fell off wound up at the center - and Janine Bendicksen took it home and performed a wing transplant.

Cecilia Dowd

Oct 8, 2025, 6:22 AM

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A butterfly with a broken wing means almost certain death. But Janine Bendicksen, of Sweetbriar Nature Center in Smithtown, was determined to see one monarch butterfly survive.

Bendicksen said she’s always wanted to try a transplant on a butterfly, and after 25 years at the nature center, she got the chance.

A monarch butterfly with a wing that was bent and eventually fell off wound up at the center - and Bendicksen took it home and performed a wing transplant.

She used a wing found in the enclosure at Sweetbriar’s butterfly vivarium, as well as contact cement, a small toothpick and corn starch.

She says she had to get creative prior to the procedure.

“When I first tried to do it, the butterfly was way too active, and I said I can’t, like, anesthetize this thing and then I realized if I put him in the refrigerator he would slow down, so that is exactly what I did," she said.

Bendicksen was able to successfully give the butterfly a new wing - it took around five minutes - and later released it.

Monarch butterflies migrate to Mexico and it should be well on his way.

Bendicksen posted a video of the procedure to social media and it has received millions of views.

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