var arrayFacts = [
"<b>Only Warm Tones:</b><br><br>Butterflies can only see red, green and yellow.",

"<b>Tastes Like Feet!</b><br><br>Butterflies taste food by standing upon it and tasting it with their feet. <br><br>Instead of mouths, they have a long, straw-like tube called a ‘proboscis’ that allows them to suck up the nectar and other juices of its food. <br><br>Butterflies usually eat rotting fruit, nectar, and water, all of which is first tasted through their feet and then sucked up through their proboscis tube.",

"<b>Grounded:</b><br><br>Butterflies cannot fly if their body temperature is less than 86 degrees.",

"<b>Fluttering Fast:</b><br><br>The fastest butterfly flight speed ever recorded is 12 mph.",

"<b>Far and Wide:</b><br><br>Monarch butterflies migrate further than any other insect.</b><br>They journey over 2,000 miles from the Great Lakes to the Gulf of Mexico before returning again. ",

"<b>Big and Beautiful:</b><br><br>The world’s largest butterfly is the Queen Alexandra Birdwing Butterfly.<br><br>The female of this species in New Guinea can have a wing span greater than 11 inches.",

"<b>Pretty, But Deadly:</b><br><br>There is a butterfly in Africa with enough poison in its body to kill six cats.",

"<b>Butterfly Lullaby:</b><br><br>The Blackfeet Indians believed that dreams were brought to them by the butterfly. <br><br>Butterfly symbols were painted on their lodges, the shapes similar to a Maltese cross. The various styles and colors were dependent on the types of images the butterfly brought to them in their dreams. <br><br>An Indian woman would embroider a butterfly symbol onto small bits of buckskin, and tie them into her baby's hair. This practice was thought to lull the baby to sleep.",

"<b>Butterfly of Confusion: </b><br><br>To a predator looking at the back end of the hairstreak butterfly, it appears to be a creature complete with eyes, antennae and legs was looking back at him. <br><br>Having this false front on the tip of its wingtips protects the butterfly from harm, since this is a part of its anatomy that would not be fatal if lost.<br><br> Think how confusing it would be to watch as the butterfly suddenly takes off, appearing to be flying backwards.",

"<b>Red Ant and Blue Butterfly: best friends. </b><br><br>Normally, the red ant will attack and bite at the slightest provocation, killing small farm animals with their burning sting. <br><br>In contrast, the  red ant protects the blue butterfly caterpillar, allowing it to feed on the ants' supply of grubs.  <br><br>In return, the ants milk the caterpillar by stroking them with their antennae while other ants drink the sweet liquid that they love.",

"<b>Pretty But Poisonous (part II):</b><br><br> The Monarch butterfly makes a poison from their primary food, a plant called milkweed.  <br><br>The amount of toxic chemicals accumulated depends on the level present in the milkweed.<br><br> This supply of poison makes the adult butterfly bitter and deadly to Blue Jays and other would-be predators.",

"<b>Monarchs on High:</b><br><br>Migrating Monarch butterflies fly as many as 80 miles per day on their way south to Mexico or California. <br><br> They use the thermal air currents to glide in, like hawks and eagles do."];
