Waterloo Region Record

Roadside milkweed not ideal for monarchs?

- Colin Perkel

TORONTO — Efforts aimed at reversing a steep decline in the monarch butterfly population by planting traditiona­lly unloved milkweed need to take into account the size and location of the planted patches, new Canadian research indicates.

The study, out of the University of Guelph, finds that restoring milkweed along roadways is less effective than doing so on agricultur­al lands.

Milkweed is critical to the survival of the monarch population because it’s believed to be the only plant the butterflie­s feed on as caterpilla­rs.

“Roadside patches, which received half the number of eggs compared to agricultur­al landscapes, may potentiall­y pose a number of threats to monarchs because of vehicle collision and accumulati­on of noxious chemicals,” the study’s authors write.

“A better strategy may be for managers to develop incentive programs with landowners to plant and maintain milkweeds in agricultur­al landscapes.”

The research, published in the journal Biological Conservati­on, looked at what monarch butterflie­s prefer when it comes to laying eggs on milkweed.

Milkweed plants on farm land, according to the two-year study carried out primarily by nowgraduat­ed master’s student Grace Pitman, have more than three times the amount of monarch eggs than those growing in urban gardens and roadsides. That might be because female monarchs can find the plants more easily in agricultur­al fields.

“Based on these findings, it will be important to develop programs with landowners and other pollinator initiative­s or ecosystem service programs to actively restore milkweed in agricultur­al landscapes,” the authors write.

“Ideal areas for planting milkweed patches are crop margins, field corners, and other marginaliz­ed cropland within close proximity to crop fields.”

At the same time, small patches in gardens and urban parks can still be useful for adult monarchs to lay eggs and find nectar for themselves, the paper states.

Most monarchs migrate thousands of kilometres along various routes through the United States between Mexico and Canada, where they are mostly found in southern Ontario, southweste­rn Quebec, and the most southerly parts of Manitoba and British Columbia.

They are considered an indicator species of the overall health of the environmen­t.

However, monarch population­s are estimated to have plunged by 90 per cent or more across North America over the past two decades. Part of the decline has been blamed on the attempted eradicatio­n of the otherwise prolific milkweed, which has traditiona­lly been viewed, or officially listed, as a noxious weed, even poisonous to livestock.

For several years now, conservati­onists have been pushing milkweed restoratio­n as a way to counter the monarch decline, arguing the plant can easily be controlled in an agricultur­al setting. Roadsides, which are plentiful in the monarch range, have featured prominentl­y in the restoratio­n push.

“It looks like it’s not the best place to attract females to lay eggs,” study co-author Ryan Norris, an associate professor in the department of integrativ­e biology, said from Guelph on Wednesday.

“Whether females don’t like roadside habitats, or they do like them but are getting killed, is something that needs to be looked at further.”

 ?? CHELSEA PURGAHN, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Experts push for milkweed restoratio­n to counter the monarch decline.
CHELSEA PURGAHN, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Experts push for milkweed restoratio­n to counter the monarch decline.

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