Toronto Star

Butterfly reserves in Mexico threatened by deforestat­ion

Loss of forest canopy is one of the threats to monarchs’ migration from Canada, U.S.

- MARK STEVENSON THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

MEXICO CITY— Illegal logging more than tripled in the monarch butterfly’s wintering grounds in central Mexico, reversing several years of steady improvemen­ts, investigat­ors announced last week.

Almost all of the loss occurred in just one rural hamlet in the state of Michoacan.

Loggers cut down 19 hectares of trees in San Felipe de los Alzati since last year’s gathering of butterflie­s.

A total of 21hectares of forest in the reserve were lost, including losses due to drought or pests.

That’s the highest figure since 2009, well above the 8 hectares lost in 2014, according to the announceme­nt by the World Wildlife fund and the Institute of Biology of Mexico’s National Autonomous University.

The 2014 loss was about 5 hectares due to logging and 3 hectares to drought.

Illegal logging fell to almost zero in 2012, and experts stressed that 31 of the 32 communitie­s in the reserve had kept logging down to very, very low levels.

The forest canopy is a sort of blanket against cold for the masses of orange-and-black butterflie­s that form huge clumps on tree branches during their stay during the winter in Mexico.

Loss of that habitat is just one of the threats to the butterflie­s’ amazing migration across Canada and the United States to Mexico.

The migration is an inherited trait: No butterfly lives to make the full round trip, and it is unclear how they find the route back to the same patch of pine forest each year.

Some scientists suggest the butterflie­s may release chemicals marking the migratory path and fear that if their numbers fall too low, the chemical traces will not be strong enough for others to follow.

This year butterflie­s that reached the wintering grounds covered 1.13 hectares, a 69-per-cent rebound from last February’s 0.67 hectare, which was the lowest since recordkeep­ing began in 1993.

Butterflie­s cluster so closely together that they are counted by the area they cover, rather than by the number of individual­s.

At their peak in 1996, the monarchs covered more than 18 hectares in the mountains west of Mexico City.

But the overall tendency since then has been a steep, progressiv­e decline.

Each time the Monarchs rebound, they do so at lower levels.

The species is found in many countries and is not in danger of extinction, but experts fear the migration could be disrupted if very few butterflie­s make the 5,470-kilometre trip.

Largely Indian farm communitie­s in the mountain reserve have received government developmen­t funds in return for preserving the 56,259-hectare reserve in the mountains west of Mexico City that UNESCO has declared a World Heritage site.

Some of the communitie­s earn income from tourist operations or reforestat­ion nurseries to grow and plant saplings.

Funding for the hamlet of San Felipe de los Alzati has temporaril­y been suspended due to the logging there.

“The government has to step up enforcemen­t and start talking more seriously with this community, to find out the causes (behind the logging).” OMAR VIDAL HEAD OF THE WORLD WILDLIFE FUND IN MEXICO

The fact that most of last year’s loss also occurred in San Felipe indicates a growing problem there, said Omar Vidal, head of the World Wildlife Fund in Mexico.

“The government has to step up enforcemen­t and start talking more seriously with this community, to find out the causes” behind the logging, Vidal said. Some communitie­s have complained that outside loggers — sometimes armed — invade local forests without the consent of the community.

Other logging, however, has been the work of locals who few other job opportunit­ies.”

After illegal logging felled hundreds of acres of trees in the reserve between 2003 and 2006, Mexican authoritie­s cracked down on illegal sawmills and stepped up incentives to encourage communitie­s to preserve the woods.

“The main problem in Mexico is the lack of protection,” said writer and activist Homero Aridjis, who noted that some officials at the reserve were replaced and that President Enrique Pena Nieto recently appointed his cousin Alejandro del Mazo to head the agency that oversees Mexico’s nature reserves.

Del Mazo’s office did not immediatel­y respond to requests for comment.

 ?? REBECCA BLACKWELL/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? A kaleidosco­pe of monarch butterflie­s hang from a tree branch. Illegal logging has almost tripled in the monarch butterfly’s wintering grounds in Mexico, reversing years of improvemen­ts.
REBECCA BLACKWELL/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO A kaleidosco­pe of monarch butterflie­s hang from a tree branch. Illegal logging has almost tripled in the monarch butterfly’s wintering grounds in Mexico, reversing years of improvemen­ts.

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