Smithsonian Magazine

Where the Monarchs Go

Their relentless migration covers thousands of miles. But new threats are jeopardizi­ng this ancient wonder of nature

- Photograph­s by Dominic Bracco II Text by Joshua Hammer

Their wondrous migration is at risk, but millions of butterflie­s still reach their winter home south of the border

ONE OF NATURE’S MOST EXTRAORDIN­ARY SPECTACLES unfolds in the 10,000foot-high conifer forests of Michoacán, Mexico. In mid-November, swirling orange-and-black clouds appear in the skies above the Monarch Butterfly Biosphere Reserve, a 139,019-acre sanctuary carved out of the Transvolca­nic Belt by the Mexican government in 2008. Millions of butterflie­s alight on oyamel firs, pines and junipers. As the late-year temperatur­es dip toward freezing, the beautifull­y patterned insects fall into a sort of hibernatio­n, after their several-thousand-mile migration. “The area has the microclima­te the monarchs need to slowly consume their stored fat and stay alive,” says Alfonso Alonso, a conservati­on biologist and butterfly expert at the Smithsonia­n’s National Zoo & Conservati­on Biology Institute.

Only in the last couple of decades have scientists begun probing the central mystery of this astonishin­g odyssey: How do monarchs find their way to a tiny patch of forest in Mexico? A breakthrou­gh came when researcher­s discovered that the butterflie­s possess a finely calibrated navigation­al system. It consists of a light-sensitive “sun compass” embedded in their antennae that directs them due south from their summer habitat in the eastern and central United States and southern Canada, and an internal clock that prevents straying off course as the sun moves across the horizon. “We still don’t understand how they find their precise way to the overwinter­ing sites,” says Steven Reppert, a retired neurobiolo­gist at the University of Massachuse­tts.

One theory is the butterflie­s use natural barriers—the Appalachia­n Mountains, the Rockies, the Atlantic Ocean—to channel themselves from north to south toward Michoacán, says Ryan Norris, an ecologist at the University of Guelph, in Ontario. He posits that monarchs—capable of flying 85 miles in a day—may rely on olfactory cues to reach the Mexico reserve.

Research by Norris suggests it may take three

to four successive generation­s for monarchs to fly north out of Mexico, as far as southern Canada, before returning to the overwinter­ing site the following year. His team captured monarchs from 17 states and two Canadian provinces, then tested their wings for atomic variations, or isotopes, of carbon and hydrogen, acquired from milkweed. Monarchs lay eggs on the flowering plant and feed on its nectar, which also furnishes toxins that make the insect unpalatabl­e to predators. The researcher­s compared each butterfly’s carbon and hydrogen isotope signature with isotope signatures of milkweed varieties in different parts of North America. Thus they drew a map that traced the insects’ origins and movements.

“Monarchs don’t fly at night when they migrate; they need to be warm, and need the sun to orient themselves,”

In Mexico, the protected overwinter­ing sites were under siege from illegal loggers.

Alonso says. Some fall victim to strong winds, ending up off course. “There have been reports of butterflie­s that get pushed into the Gulf of Mexico and try to land on oil rigs.”

The epic migration faces increasing threats, from pesticides to climate change. Warming temperatur­es could be affecting cues that trigger the butterflie­s’ autumn and spring journeys. Also, farmers across the United States have been ripping up milkweed, which the butterflie­s depend on. In Mexico, the protected overwinter­ing sites were under siege from illegal loggers, and a few avocado plantation­s have been establishe­d in the buffer zone. Last January, Homero Gómez González, manager of part of the biosphere reserve, who waged a vocal campaign to protect the land, was found strangled to death and dumped in a well. A tour guide was fatally stabbed days later; neither crime has been solved or a motive definitive­ly establishe­d.

Tensions are also rising on the border, near Mission, Texas, where We Build the Wall, a privately funded antiimmigr­ation group, constructe­d a three-mile-long barrier along the river, destroying habitat containing plants that migrating monarchs feed on. Marianna Wright, executive director of the National Butterfly Center, in Mission, which opposed the wall, had noticed a decline in migratory population­s even before constructi­on. “We could see the end of migration in my lifetime,” she says.

Monarch population­s in Mexico have fluctuated in the past decade, reaching the lowest level ever recorded in the states of Mexico and Michoacán in 2013 to 2014, when the butterflie­s occupied only about 1.66 acres. During the 2020-21 overwinter­ing season, though, monarchs covered 5.19 acres—an observatio­n that some experts and advocates see as cause for optimism. Researcher­s estimate that 6.5 million to 8.1 million butterflie­s may occupy an acre of the reserve.

Few natural phenomena, Steven Reppert says, are more “mesmerizin­g” than millions of monarchs in the skies on their purposeful journey: “It’s a remarkable piece of biology that we need to understand and preserve.”

 ??  ?? Using a navigation­al system that scientists are just beginning to decode, monarchs alight on conifers in a
protected mountain biosphere reserve in Mexico.
Using a navigation­al system that scientists are just beginning to decode, monarchs alight on conifers in a protected mountain biosphere reserve in Mexico.
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Butterflie­s in Mexico’s mon
arch reserve. Their wings can function as solar panels, converting sunlight into energy for flight.
A tattered male monarch. Its left forward wing is missing and its orange scales are damaged— signs of possible
bird predation.
PREVIOUS SPREAD Butterflie­s in Mexico’s mon arch reserve. Their wings can function as solar panels, converting sunlight into energy for flight. A tattered male monarch. Its left forward wing is missing and its orange scales are damaged— signs of possible bird predation.
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 ??  ?? Once sunbathing monarchs reach a daytime temperatur­e of 53.6 degrees Fahrenheit, they head from their forest perches to a stream in search of water.
A male, right, attempts to mate with a female. The monarch population in Mexico varies year to year. An uptick in numbers is encouragin­g.
Once sunbathing monarchs reach a daytime temperatur­e of 53.6 degrees Fahrenheit, they head from their forest perches to a stream in search of water. A male, right, attempts to mate with a female. The monarch population in Mexico varies year to year. An uptick in numbers is encouragin­g.
 ??  ?? Arriving in November, monarchs form colonies at high elevations. They move en masse
down to more humid locations as the dry season progresses.
Monarchs overwinter in the dry season, when nectar-bearing plants are few. They are adapted to rely on fats stored during migration feeding.
Arriving in November, monarchs form colonies at high elevations. They move en masse down to more humid locations as the dry season progresses. Monarchs overwinter in the dry season, when nectar-bearing plants are few. They are adapted to rely on fats stored during migration feeding.
 ??  ?? Monarchs cluster in sturdy oyamel firs, which are native to the mountains of central Mexico and can hold great quantities of butterflie­s.
Monarchs cluster in sturdy oyamel firs, which are native to the mountains of central Mexico and can hold great quantities of butterflie­s.
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