Taxing Long Island
News12 New York
Download the App
Where to Watch
Local
Crime
Weather
beWell
The East End
Crime Files
Stony Brook Medicine
FIFA World Cup

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

Updated

Share:

Top Stories

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.

Top Stories

App StoreGoogle Play Store

info

Newsletter

Send Photos/Videos

Contact

About Us

News Team

News 12 New York

follow us

Twitter

Facebook

Instagram

more resources

Optimum Corporate

Optimum Service

Advertise on News 12

Careers

Content Removal Policy

© 2026 N12N, LLC

Privacy Policy

Terms of Service

Ad Choices