Are monarch butterflies dwindling or rebounding?

Csmonitor

Are monarch butterflies dwindling or rebounding?"


Play all audios:

Loading...

Earlier this year, the monarch butterfly seemed to be starting a comeback after 20 years of habitat loss took a serious toll on its population. The insect, which is known for its distinctive


orange-and-black wings and dramatic migration pattern that has some butterflies cover a distance of up to 3,000 miles, seemed to be responding positively to joint conservation efforts from


the United States, Mexico, and Canada earlier this year. But this summer's monarch butterfly counts have yielded alarmingly low numbers of the species, compared with last year. While


the species as a whole is not at risk of extinction, Jason Weintraub, an entomologist at Drexel University's Academy of Natural Sciences in Philadelphia tells The Christian Science


Monitor, two key “metapopulations” are in serious decline. What’s more, the decline of the monarch is emblematic of the loss of wild habitat throughout much of North America, and with it an


army of pollinator insects that play a key role in human food production. "Our food supply depends on insect pollination," Dr. Weintraub says in a telephone interview, adding that


we all are dependent on the work of "hundreds of thousands of different species of bees, wasps, flies, beetles, butterflies, and moths." The monarch, like many insect species in


North America, is struggling from loss of habitat. According to Monarch Watch, an organization based at the University of Kansas, there have been significant losses of habitat for these


monarchs in their summer breeding grounds in the US, as well as their overwintering sites in central Mexico. During winter, loss of tree cover due to illegal logging and a surging population


of bark beetles leaves monarchs susceptible to predators and the elements. In the US, monarchs lose up to 6,000 acres of potential habitat a day due to land development, Monarch Watch says.


  Another problem is the butterflies' source of food. Monarch caterpillars will only eat milkweed, which used to grow abundantly in the Midwestern US. But milkweed didn't fit into


the agricultural trend of monocropping, the practice of growing large fields of a single crop, and in recent decades became a casualty of aggressive weed control practices.  Yet conservation


efforts seemed to be yielding positive results in March. Monarchs appeared to be on the rebound, the Monitor reported: the butterflies blanketed a 10-acre area in Mexico this winter. This


was more than 3.5 times greater than the previous season, which saw 2.8 acres of butterflies, with a record low of 1.66 acres in 2013. "The increase is certainly great news, but the


bottom line is that monarchs must reach a much larger population size to be resilient to ever-increasing threats," Tierra Curry, a senior scientist at the Washington, D.C.-based Center


for Biological Diversity, told the Monitor in March. Those words turned out to be darkly prophetic. Later that month, a massive storm brought high winds, rain, and cold to the


butterfly's overwintering ground in Mexico's pine and fir forests, claiming an estimated 6.2 million butterflies and felling more than a hundred acres of forests that the


butterflies depend on for shelter in the winter, according to Weather.com. While similar storms in the area are not unheard of, this storm was unexpectedly intense, fueled by shifting


temperatures due to climate change. It is hard to say how badly the storm affected the rebounding population, but current butterfly counts are not looking good for the monarch. But while the


butterfly may be struggling now, conservationists hope it can rebound again with a little help. Over the past several years, various multinational conservation efforts have been implemented


across North America to preserve the butterfly. Recently, the Obama administration created a "fly-way" for the insect, planting milkweed along highways along the monarch's


migration path to Mexico. According to the national strategy plan released by the White House, the fly-way is intended to increase the population to 225 million butterflies by 2020.


Non-government groups have also begun campaigns to plant milkweed, sometimes giving away the plants for free. Other groups are petitioning the US government to designate the monarch


butterfly an endangered species, which would entitle the species to increased protections.  "The neat thing about monarch and pollinator conservation is that you can do it


anywhere," ecologist Scott Black, the executive director of the nonprofit Xerces Society for Invertebrate Conservation, based in Portland, Ore., told the Monitor in 2015. "You can


take a park or a school yard, put in flowering plants and milkweed, and make sure to keep out herbicides. Everybody can take action."


Trending News

'heartbeats' looks at love links

Wow! I was amazed to read the Counterpunch piece by Cheryl Layne Farrell concerning my musical play, “Heartbeats,” curre...

Expect new ipad air and apple watch 6 at apple's tuesday event, analyst says

Apple CEO Tim Cook welcomes customers to the opening of a new Apple Store at the historic Carnegie Library building May ...

Beyond free wi-fi: hotel perks that will surprise even the most well-traveled guests

In-room coffee makers, Wi-Fi, a bottle of water and, sometimes, complimentary nationwide phone calls are now among the s...

Review: redd kross and the melvins let some hair fly as the year flips

It was about a quarter past midnight — 2012 had just gone — when singer and guitarist Jeff McDonald of Los Angeles band ...

Eli Lilly releases new form of weight loss drug Zepbound for half the price to boost access, supply

Eli Lilly on Tuesday released a new form of its weight loss drug Zepbound for roughly half its usual monthly list price ...

Latests News

Are monarch butterflies dwindling or rebounding?

Earlier this year, the monarch butterfly seemed to be starting a comeback after 20 years of habitat loss took a serious ...

The ralph h. Johnson va health care system, named 5-star medical facility in the south carolina and georgia for quality and patient satisfaction | va

Charleston , SC — The Ralph H. Johnson VA Health Care System was recently named the only 5-star medical facility in Sout...

Albright to Visit Moscow for Talks

U.S. Secretary of State Madeleine Albright has scheduled talks in Moscow in late January after recent disagreements chil...

Limousin trade tops at 8000gns at newark - farmers weekly

A strong gathering for a solid trade of Limousin males and females at Newark Livestock Market saw prices head in to the ...

San bernardino shooting updates: portraits of the victims as a community mourns

Warning that Congress has become “complicit” in gun violence with its inaction, Senate Democrats forced votes Thursday o...

Top