Monarch
butterfly population in jeopardy after Mexican storm
Numbers
are similar to those reported in 2013, when the monarch population
was at an all-time low
CBC,
13
May, 2016
Canadians
hoping to catch a glimpse of monarch butterflies this spring will
have to look a little harder because a harsh, late winter storm in
Mexico may have wiped out up to 50 per cent of the butterfly's
population.
Rain,
sleet and snow ravaged
over-wintering colonies in Mexico on March 8 and 9,
leaving butterflies frozen to trees and dead on the ground.
Lingering
effects of the storm aren't yet known for sure, but experts are
preparing for plummeting numbers.
"Right
now, it certainly looks like it's going to be a much lower
population. It doesn't look particularly good," warned Chip
Taylor, a professor in the department of ecology and evolutionary
biology at the University of Kansas and founder and director of
Monarch Watch.
Monarch
Watch described the storm that affected nine colonies in Mexico as
"unprecedented."
A
storm in Mexico left hundreds of monarch butterflies frozen to trees
in which they were roosting. (Homero Gomez/Journey North)
There
is no firm count of the monarchs that died in the storm. Estimates
range wildly from three to 50 per cent because monarchs had already
started their journey north.
All-time low possible?
Monarch
Watch admits, "recolonization of the south region [in] Texas,
Oklahoma and Kansas this spring has been slow."
Taylor
noted that Journey North, another project dedicated to tracking
monarchs, has recorded the number of first sightings this year. Those
numbers are similar to those reported in 2013, when the
monarch population was at an all-time low.
"However,
first sightings are an imperfect indicator of what to expect for the
rest of the season," Taylor said.
Darlene
Burgess, a Leamington, Ont., woman who raises monarch
butterflies on her property near Point Pelee National Park, the last
stop for monarch's headed south in the fall, called the storm "a
huge concern."
Burgess
had flown to Mexico at the beginning of March to visit four
sanctuaries on the Monarch Butterfly Biosphere Reserve.
She
left Mexico the day before the storm hit and kept in contact with
monarch enthusiasts there.
'It's devastating'
"While
I was there, the weather was warm and they were beginning to leave
the trees and they were mating. There were such high hopes," she
said. "It's devastating to know that may not come true this
year.
"We're
trying to be optimistic and hoping many of them had already left."
Taylor
said storms are just one problem – and a rare one, at that –
monarchs must overcome.
"This
is what nature gives you and this is what you have to work with. It's
not at all disheartening. They manage to bounce back from them,"
Taylor said. "You're going to see these natural year-to-year
variations in almost anything. Monarchs are remarkably resilient.
"The
key, of course, is they need habitat. The habitat puts the cap on
everything."
'Not talking about instant gratification'
Monarch
butterflies use milkweed for both breeding and food. They will lay
their eggs only on milkweed. In the past decade, a large number of
the plants have been destroyed by pesticide and urban sprawl.
In
order for the monarch population to rebound fully and continue to
thrive, 1.1 billion stems of milkweed need to be planted in the U.S.
That's
partially why Taylor called the storm "not at all
disheartening."
"Restoration
projects are a long haul type of thing. We're not talking about
instant gratification," he said while en route to planting
milkweed in Oklahoma on Friday morning. "We're talking about a
decade or more to bring this butterfly back.
"We
will have a better sense of how the population is developing later
this month.
The long-range forecasts for May and early June favour
movement northward by the first generation monarchs."
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