Daily Democrat (Woodland)

Feds delay protection for monarch butterfly

- By John Flesher

TRAVERSE CITY, MICH. » Federal officials on Tuesday declared the monarch butterfly “a candidate” for threatened or endangered status, but said no action would be taken for several years because of the many other species awaiting that designatio­n.

Environmen­talists said delaying that long could spell disaster for the beloved black- and- orange butterfly, once a common sight in backyard gardens, meadows and other landscapes now seeing its population dwindling.

The monarch’s status will be reviewed annually, said Charlie Wooley, head of the U. S. Fish and Wildlife Service’s Great Lakes regional office. Emergency action could be taken earlier, but plans now call for proposing to list the monarch under the Endangered Species Act in 2024 unless its situation improves enough to make the step unnecessar­y.

The proposal would be followed by another year for public comment and developmen­t of a final rule. Listing would provide a number of legal protection­s, including a requiremen­t that federal agencies consider effects on the butterfly or its habitat before allowing highway constructi­on and other potentiall­y damaging activities.

Scientists estimate the monarch population in the eastern U. S. has fallen about 80% since the mid1990s, while the drop- off in the western U. S. has been even steeper.

“We conducted an intensive, thorough review using a rigorous, transparen­t science- based process and found that the monarch meets listing criteria under the Endangered Species Act,” Fish and Wildlife Service Director Aurelia Skipwith said in a statement. “However, before we can propose listing, we must focus resources on

our higher- priority listing actions.”

Scientists will continue monitoring the butterfly’s numbers and the effectiven­ess of what Wooley described as perhaps the most widespread grassroots campaign ever waged to save an imperiled animal.

Since 2014, when environmen­tal groups petitioned to list the monarch, school groups, garden clubs, government agencies and others around the nation have restored about 5.6 million acres of milkweed plants on which monarchs depend, Wooley said. They lay eggs on the leaves, which caterpilla­rs eat, while adults gather nectar from the flowers.

The volunteer effort “has been phenomenal to see,” he said. “It has made a difference in the longterm survival of monarchs and helped other pollinator­s that are potentiall­y in trouble.”

But advocacy groups say

it has compensate­d for only a small fraction of the estimated 165 million acres of monarch habitat — an area the size of Texas — lost in the past 20 years to developmen­t or herbicide applicatio­ns in cropland.

“Monarchs are too important for us to just plant flowers on roadsides and hope for the best,” said Tierra Curry, a senior scientist at the Center for Biological

Diversity. “They need the comprehens­ive protection that comes only from the Endangered Species Act, which would save them and so many other beleaguere­d pollinator­s that share their habitat.”

The monarch’s plight is part of what the United Nations describes as a worldwide crisis threatenin­g 1 million species — one of every eight on Earth — with extinction because of climate change, developmen­t and pollution.

Even so, the Trump administra­tion has listed only 25 species — fewer than any since the act took effect in 1973. The Obama administra­tion added 360.

Trump’s team also has weakened protection­s for endangered and threatened species in its push for deregulati­on. Among other changes, it limited considerat­ion of climate change’s effects on animals when evaluating whether they should be listed.

Global warming is one of the biggest dangers to the monarch. It contribute­s to lengthenin­g droughts and worsening storms that kill many during their annual migration.

About 90% of the world’s monarchs live in North America. Scientists measure their abundance by the size of the areas they occupy in Mexico and California, where they cluster during winter after flying thousands of miles from as far away as Canada.

The Fish and Wildlife Service estimates the larger eastern population declined from about 384 million in 1996 to a low of 14 million in 2013 before rebounding somewhat, reaching about 60 million last year.

But the California- based western group dropped from about 1.2 million in 1997 to fewer than 30,000 in 2019. Preliminar­y survey results this fall have turned up only about 2,000, said Lori Nordstrom, the Fish and Wildlife Service’s assistant regional director.

While such grim prospects qualify the monarch for listing, officials said the law allows delays when the agency has limited resources and must focus on higher- priority cases under considerat­ion.

Species ahead in line might be worse off, or courts might have set deadlines for decisions on them.

The Great Lakes office, which is handling the monarch case, is considerin­g nine others with higherprio­rity status. They include the little brown bat, the plains spotted skunk, the Illinois chorus frog, the golden- winged warbler, Blanding’s turtle, the Mammoth Springs crayfish, two freshwater mussels and a plant called Hall’s bulrush.

“Monarchs are too important for us to just plant flowers on roadsides and hope for the best. They need the comprehens­ive protection that comes only from the Endangered Species Act.” — Tierra Curry, a senior scientist at the Center for Biological Diversity

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 ?? PHOTOS BY CAROLYN KASTER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? A monarch butterfly rests on a plant at Abbott’s Mill Nature Center in Milford, Del.
PHOTOS BY CAROLYN KASTER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE A monarch butterfly rests on a plant at Abbott’s Mill Nature Center in Milford, Del.
 ??  ?? A monarch butterfly rests on a Swedish Ivy plant soon after emerging in Washington.
A monarch butterfly rests on a Swedish Ivy plant soon after emerging in Washington.

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