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Monday, December 24, 2012

MONARCH BUTTERFLY SLAUGHTERED BY ROUNDUP HERBICIDE

I came across an in-depth article written by Molly M. Ginty, a journalist who writes for Ms., Women's eNews, On the Issues, the Utne Reader, The Nation. The article appeared in In These Times newspaper on December 5th, entitled, Fall of the Monarchs. Can we save North America’s most beloved butterfly? A University of Minnesota study linked the monarch decline to glyphosate, aka Roundup. In the United States, 94,000 tons of the herbicide are applied each year. A lady named Ms. Jackson is highlighted. She’s a Monarch enthusiast, like me, and lives on 10 acres outside Davisburg, Mich. She grows four types of milkweed in a “butterfly garden” and fills her house with plastic containers in which she hatches butterfly eggs. Like me, she is alarmed by the monarchs’ population decline.

Scientists say that the downfall has been caused in small part by environmental factors, but mostly by two types of human meddling: the use of herbicides that are killing off milkweed plants in the United States, and the illegal logging of the pine and fir trees on which the monarchs make their homes for five months of the winter in central Mexico. Jackson is a volunteer for Monarch Watch, an organization devoted to saving the Monarch butterfly from extinction. They use a number of strategies to slow or halt U.S. herbicide use and Mexican logging.


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“Monarch butterflies warn of what might lie ahead for other wild creatures affected by over-farming and deforestation,” according to Chip Taylor, professor of insect ecology at the University of Kansas in Lawrence, who founded Monarch Watch in 1992. Taylor stated, “It’s clear that this year’s total population is down, and that the overwintering group that just arrived in Mexico is among the lowest ever recorded.”

The devastating reduction started 15 years ago—very recently in the monarch’s long history. An estimated 250,000 years old, this species predates modern humans by 50,000 years and has until now enjoyed a hardiness that belies its 4-inch wingspan and 0.2-ounce weight. Monarch butterflies feed on the nectar of a variety of flowers, such as the coneflowers and daisies that Jackson grows in her garden. They lay their eggs on a once-ubiquitous plant: the light green, fuzzy-leafed milkweed, named for its rubbery, milk-colored sap. Because monarchs multiply in such vast numbers, they have until now been able to winter safely in just one 60-square mile area, clustering on south-facing slopes that are 10,000 feet above sea level in the mountains of Mexico’s Michoacán state.

Every March, monarchs wake from their winter slumber, warm their wings in the spring sunlight, and begin the frenzied business of mating. As swarms of them start flying northward, the females lay their eggs on milkweed plants that the hatchling caterpillars eat. New butterflies emerge from cocoons and begin to trek north, mating and laying eggs by the billions. The monarchs fan out across the United States and up to Canada, where the fourth generation, descended from the hibernating population in Mexico, turns around and starts flying south to Michoacán at an average rate of 50 miles per day.

From June to September, in the three short months that they migrate from Canada to Mexico, the monarchs journey 3,000 miles. They start their journey flying solo, then gather in a swarm that is 50 miles wide and casts a shadow as it crosses the U.S.-Mexico border. Researchers have yet to determine what guides the monarchs - whether it is smell, water, sunlight, magnetic fields, or some hardwired form of butterfly radar. All scientists know is that the monarchs know where to go. If you catch and crate a large group of them, fly them in planes hundreds of miles off course and release them, they will still head straight to Mexico.

Mexicans consider the butterflies to be the souls of their departed ancestors and every October welcome las monarcas with boisterous festivals. But this year fewer butterflies have showed up for the party. They cover just 7 acres of forest versus the optimum 15, with a growing number dying right after arrival. One by one, they tumble lifeless from the tall trees. Their delicate, bright wings carpet the forest floor.

Suburban sprawl and recent droughts both threaten the milkweed that is essential to the monarchs’ survival. But scientists say most of the monarchs’ downfall is likely tied to modern-day agricultural practices. Molly M. Ginty uncovered  a University of Minnesota study that linked 10 years of monarch decline to glyphosate, the most popular herbicide in the United States, used in brands such as Monsanto’s Roundup. An estimated 84,000 tons of glyphosate are applied annually to soybeans, corn and other U.S. commercial crops. On top of this comes 3,600 tons used in the home and garden sectors, and 6,800 tons used by private businesses and government agencies.

Though glyphosate may be a boon to farmers and landscapers, it is killing milkweed—normally among the hardiest and most stubborn of plants—in record numbers. One recent study found that the milkweed population in the Midwest plunged 58 percent from 1999 to 2010, and that as a result, monarch egg production plummeted 81 percent.

Ginty described how the butterflies’ winter resting grounds are also under threat. Michoacáns near the state’s 12 butterfly reserves often turn to illegal logging because they have few other sources of income. It can take an illegal logger less than an hour to chop down a pine tree that has been sheltering monarchs for centuries. “From 1986 to 2006, 20 percent of the forest reserves in Michoacán were disturbed,” says Maria Isabel Ramirez, a geographer and conservationist from the National Autonomous University of Mexico. “More than 60 percent of this loss is tied to illegal extractions.”

Molly M. Ginty's article offered a ray of hope. She described how, in the United States, butterfly lovers are offsetting the milkweed die-off by building “monarch way stations,” such as the milkweed gardens that are now growing everywhere from a convention center roof in Pittsburgh to Debbie Jackson’s backyard in Davisburg, Mich. I, myself, created a Monarch way station in my side and backyard, with over 44 milkweed plants and nectaring flowers. Last year, I collected Monarch eggs off them and raised and released 80 Monarch butterflies into the sky...from just my small yard!! Now that Jackson’s butterfly gardening season has ended, she is busy giving butterfly talks at local schools, and making the rounds at community groups and churches, inspiring others to adopt some of the 1,500 monarch eggs that she will give away next summer. Indoor hatching boosts the caterpillars’ survival rate, a grim 4 to robust 90 percent.

“I want everyone to witness the miracle that I did as a child,” says Jackson. “When you watch a newly hatched monarch hang from your finger and unfurl its wings, you can’t help but dedicate yourself to this creature’s survival.”

I am so glad that journalists like Molly M. Ginty create an awareness of the Monarch butterfly's plight, through thorough research and a homespun writing style. I'm also thankful to citizens like Ms. Jackson, who created a Monarch Waystation in her yard, like I did. Please convert a space in your yard to help save the Monarch butterfly. Read how fun, easy and enjoyable it is to create a Monarch waystation in your yard.

Robert Morton, M.Ed., Ed.S believes urban sprawl can be offset by creating wildlife-friendly spaces in America's 25,000,000+ acres lawns, one yard at a time! Click HERE to learn why. A portion of Ad revenues (10%) will be donated to Monarch Watch, earmarked for their Monarch Waystation program. Do you have a wildlife-friendly space? Please share it by Contacting Us!