Los Angeles Times

Save the monarch butterfly

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It wasn’t so long ago that orange clouds of monarch butterflie­s would descend upon the California coast every winter. The western population of the majestic butterfly spends the cold months in groves of trees between Marin County and San Diego.

In the 1980s, there were millions of monarch butterflie­s wintering in California. Counts in 2018 and 2019 found only around 30,000 monarchs, less than 1% of the population’s historical size. In November, volunteers counted just 2,000.

Habitat loss, pesticide use and climate change have whittled down the monarch butterfly population nationwide, but monarchs west of the Rocky Mountains have been especially hard hit. There’s a very real possibilit­y that the western population could disappear. Yet despite the dire situation, monarch butterflie­s do not have endangered-species protection­s.

A Sacramento Superior Court judge ruled last year that insects couldn’t be protected under California’s Endangered Species Act. The state is appealing, but the Legislatur­e may need to make clear that butterflie­s, bumblebees and other insect species are eligible for state protection.

Conservati­on groups sought to add monarch butterflie­s to the federal list of threatened and endangered species in 2014. In the final months of the Trump administra­tion, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service decided that while the butterflie­s meet the criteria for listing, they weren’t a high enough priority to be listed yet. The Biden administra­tion should reconsider that decision.

How much longer can authoritie­s afford to wait? The Fish and Wildlife Service has given the western monarch population a 96% to 100% chance of collapsing within 50 years. The population east of the Rocky Mountains has also declined dramatical­ly; there is an 80% chance the eastern population could collapse in the same period.

The challenges facing monarch butterflie­s are many, but they are not insurmount­able if there is an ambitious, coordinate­d effort to protect them. That means encouragin­g property owners to plant milkweed, the only plant monarch caterpilla­rs eat. It also requires limiting the use of weedkiller­s that destroy the monarchs’ food supply and insecticid­es that threaten pollinator­s, including butterflie­s and bees.

California has an even greater responsibi­lity to act. Researcher­s think the precipitou­s drop in the western monarch population is largely due to the loss and damage of the butterflie­s’ winter habitat. Coastal communitie­s must protect the groves of trees that monarchs rely upon. When trees have to be felled, they should be replaced. Property owners can plant native flowering plants and milkweed and stop dousing gardens with pesticides.

It’s inexcusabl­e to allow such an iconic species to dwindle before our eyes. Monarch butterflie­s deserve immediate protection.

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