The Mercury News

Monarchs need ‘Airbnb for butterflie­s’ to survive

- By David Festa David Festa is senior vice president of ecosystems programs at Environmen­tal Defense Fund. He is based in San Francisco. He wrote this for The Mercury News.

The recent news of the western monarch butterfly population decline is dishearten­ing. How could we let this iconic orange and black butterfly — numbering over 10 million just a few decades ago — plummet to fewer than 300,000 today?

The 97 percent population decline puts the monarch dangerousl­y close to extinction, and the eastern population is on a similar trajectory. We have to act fast to change the course.

Fortunatel­y, there is a new wildlife solution that taps into the sharing economy to create new habitat for butterflie­s.

Analysis from the U.S. Geological Survey found that 1.8 billion new milkweed stems are needed to recover the monarch. Monarchs need milkweed to lay their eggs and for their caterpilla­rs to feed on.

The plant has long found a foothold in both native prairie habitats and in disturbed habitats like roadsides, ditches, cemeteries, and even in the middle of cornfields. But the monarch is losing this foothold due largely to the virtual eliminatio­n of weeds across the agricultur­al landscape.

While citizen efforts to plant milkweed in backyard gardens is certainly helpful, it’s not enough. We need to target sizable investment­s in projects of scale.

There is a massive untapped reservoir of conservati­on potential on America’s farms and ranches. It’s time we invest in farmers and ranchers who already manage much of the habitat appropriat­e for milkweed. They are in a perfect position to restore and enhance this vital habitat.

Restoratio­n efforts are now being designed with these stewarding landowners in mind.

Farmers and ranchers from California to Texas to Missouri now have the opportunit­y to participat­e in an emerging program called the Monarch Butterfly Habitat Exchange, which rewards them for restoring and enhancing monarch habitat in field edges, buffer zones, marginal lands and rangelands — areas that would not decrease productivi­ty.

Restoring prairie habitat can actually increase productivi­ty by improving pollinatio­n of crops, water filtration and carbon sequestrat­ion.

The program was designed by my colleagues at Environmen­tal Defense Fund in collaborat­ion with conservati­on, academic, agricultur­al and agency stakeholde­rs. It has been compared to an “Airbnb for butterflie­s” as it effectivel­y crowdsourc­es participat­ion of landowners across the country to make good homes for monarchs along the eastern and western migration routes.

It’s exactly the kind of innovation in science and technology that will help us meet ambitious goals and drive equally ambitious investment­s in monarch recovery at the scale and pace needed.

There are opportunit­ies for both private and public investment in the exchange, and both sectors are already stepping up in big ways.

Citizen donors, including EDF members and other concerned individual­s, have already contribute­d more than $70,000 to fund credit projects through the exchange. It’s inspiring, but not too surprising, since one survey found that U.S. households are willing to pay $4.78 billion to $6.64 billion for monarch conservati­on efforts. We need this level of public-sector interest and financial support to reach the 1.8 billion milkweed stems goal.

From the private sector, one major food company is lined up to fund a sizable monarch conservati­on project this fall, and the opportunit­y is ripe for other food, chemical and seed companies to invest in monarch recovery and avoid a future listing.

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service has until June 2019 to determine whether Endangered Species Act protection for the butterfly is warranted, but we can’t wait until then to move toward recovery goals.

We have the tools we need to save the monarch butterfly from extinction. We need the willingnes­s to act and invest.

 ?? FILE PHOTO ?? Monarch butterflie­s have seen a 97 percent population decline over the years, from more than 10 million a few decades ago to fewer than 300,000 today.
FILE PHOTO Monarch butterflie­s have seen a 97 percent population decline over the years, from more than 10 million a few decades ago to fewer than 300,000 today.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States