The Daily Courier

Monarch butterflie­s drop by 53% in wintering area

- By The Associated Press

MEXICO CITY — The number of monarch butterflie­s that showed up at their winter resting grounds decreased about 53% this year, Mexican officials said Friday.

Some activists called the decline “heartbreak­ing,” but the Mexico head of the World Wildlife Fund said the reduction “is not alarming.”

WWF Mexico director Jorge Rickards said the previous year’s large numbers were “atypical” and the monarchs had returned to their average population levels of recent years.

The government commission for natural protected areas said the butterflie­s’ population was “stable,” even though they covered only 2.8 hectares this year. That was down from 6.05 hectares the previous year. Because the monarchs cluster so densely in pine and fir trees, it is easier to count them by area rather than by individual­s.

“During the most recent wintering season the norm has been for the butterflie­s to cover an average of about three hectares,” Rickards said.

“The last season, 2018-19, was very good, with 6.05 hectares of forest cover, but it was certainly atypical, thanks to the fact that the first generation of butterflie­s in the spring of 2018 encountere­d favourable weather conditions to reproduce,” he said.

In contrast, butterflie­s in the spring of 2019 encountere­d colder weather in Texas than the previous year, and thus were less able to reproduce.

Millions of monarchs migrate from the

United States and Canada each year to pine and fir forests west of Mexico’s capital.

In contrast to Rickards’ view, Tierra Curry, a senior scientist at the Center for Biological Diversity, wrote that “scientists were expecting the count to be down slightly, but this level of decrease is heartbreak­ing.”

“More protection­s are clearly needed for this migratory wonder and its habitat,” Curry wrote.

Environmen­talist and author Homero Aridjis said that “the decline of over 53% of population­s in the butterfly reserve is worrisome, above all because of the effects of climate change on the migration route and on the wintering grounds in Mexico.”

Aridjis said crime and deforestat­ion in Mexico is also a cause for alarm. One butterfly activist and a part-time guide in the reserve were murdered earlier this year.

Last year’s numbers were the biggest since the 2006-2007 season. Two years ago, the butterflie­s covered 2.48 hectares, similar to this year’s numbers. The butterflie­s hit a low of just 0.67 hectares in 2013-2014.

Mexico has made some strides against illegal logging in the reserve, but Aridjis said it remains a problem in some areas. Butterflie­s depend on health tree canopy to protect them from rain and cold.

Some scientists said the approximat­ely 6-hectare coverage of a year ago should be seen as a minimum for the viability of the migrating monarchs in the future.

Loss of habitat, especially the milkweed where the monarchs lay their eggs, pesticide and herbicide use, as well climate change, all pose threats to the species’ migration.

 ?? The Associated Press ?? Monarch butterflie­s cling to branches in their winter nesting grounds in El Rosario Sanctuary, near Ocampo, Michoacan state, Mexico.
The Associated Press Monarch butterflie­s cling to branches in their winter nesting grounds in El Rosario Sanctuary, near Ocampo, Michoacan state, Mexico.

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