I raised and released 115 Monarch butterflies in 2014
The Monarch butterfly has a wingspan up to just more than 4 inches and weighs less than a gram. It spends much of its life migrating, flying more than 3,000 miles between Canada, the United States and Mexico.
“This journey has become more dangerous and less successful for many monarchs because of threats in their migratory paths and summer and overwintering habitats, particularly the loss of milkweed, the monarch caterpillar’s primary food source,” says Vanessa Kauffman, another spokeswoman for the Fish and Wildlife Service.
The introduction of genetically engineered crops resilient to herbicides has led to more herbicide use on and around crops in the Midwest, where most monarchs hatch. As herbicide use skyrockets, the amount of milkweed plummets and not surprisingly, the number of monarchs has plummeted as well. The Monarch population in North America has dropped 90 percent, and in the West it has dropped 50 percent.
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DEDICATED TO SAVING THE MONARCH BUTTERFLY
MONARCH WAYSTATION ATTRACTS MONARCHS TO YARD
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