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Bayard

(22,100 posts)
Thu Jan 31, 2019, 01:42 PM Jan 2019

Monarch butterfly population wintering in Mexico increases 144%

https://amp.theguardian.com/environment/2019/jan/30/mexico-monarch-butterflies-wintering-population-increase#referrer=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.google.com&_tf=From%20%251%24s

Monarch production will not be replicated next year, experts warn, as above average temperatures will cause problems.

The population of monarch butterflies wintering in central Mexico is up 144% over last year, according to new research.

'It's a sad reality': a troubling trend sees a 97% decline in monarch butterflies

The data was cheered but scientists quickly warned that it does not mean the butterflies that migrate from Canada and the United States are out of danger.

This winter, researchers found the butterflies occupying 14.95 acres (6.05 hectares) of pine and fir forests in the mountains of Michoacán and Mexico states – an increase from 6.12 acres a year ago.

This year’s is the biggest measurement since the 2006-2007 period, said Andrew Rhodes, Mexico’s national commissioner for protected natural areas. A historic low of just 1.66 acres (0.67 hectares) was recorded in 2013-2014.
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Monarch butterfly population wintering in Mexico increases 144% (Original Post) Bayard Jan 2019 OP
That's encouraging.. Duppers Jan 2019 #1
They are all trying to get away from Donald RAB910 Jan 2019 #2
I'm doing my part. Baitball Blogger Jan 2019 #3
Meanwhile the California Monarch Butterfly Population Down 86 Percent in One Year Brother Buzz Jan 2019 #4

Brother Buzz

(36,444 posts)
4. Meanwhile the California Monarch Butterfly Population Down 86 Percent in One Year
Thu Jan 31, 2019, 02:42 PM
Jan 2019
California Monarch Butterfly Population Down 86 Percent in One Year

California's coast, from Bolinas to Pismo Beach, is a popular overwintering site for the western population of monarch butterflies. Historically, you could find millions of the orange and black winged invertebrates around this time of year, using coastal eucalyptus trees as shelter.

But there’s been a troubling trend over the past few decades. Each year, fewer monarchs have been showing up to overwinter on the state's coast, according to preliminary numbers from the Xerces Society, an environmental conservation nonprofit. The group's annual Thanksgiving count found the 2018 population of these butterflies is down to 20,456 compared to 2017's 148,000. That's a one year, 86 percent decline.

"It's been hard for me, as I remember the millions of monarchs of the 1980s," said Mia Monroe, a Bay Area-based Xerces Society member who helps lead California's monarch population count. "We only have less than one percent of the monarchs that we once historically had."

Counts typically fluctuate from year to year, but Monroe said this year's dramatic drop is breathtaking. Volunteers, like Monroe, counted the butterflies at 97 sites across California, according to the Xerces Society. There are several historical overwintering sites in the Bay Area for monarchs. Some of the more popular locations are in Marin County near the communities of Bolinas, Stinson Beach and Muir Beach.

The exact cause for this year's sharp decline is not known, but Xerces scientists and researchers with U.C. Davis, Tufts University and Washington State University did observe a low population of the monarchs at the beginning of their breeding season last spring.

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https://www.kqed.org/news/11715197/california-monarch-butterfly-population-down-86-percent-in-one-year

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