Google – AFP, 10 Sep 2013
![]() |
The Monarch
butterfly population is shrinking due to illegal logging
and the use of
herbicides (AFP/File, Gabriel Bouys)
|
MEXICO CITY
— The Monarch butterfly population is shrinking due to illegal logging in
Mexican forests and herbicides used in Canada and the United States along its
migration route, said a new study.
The orange
and black butterfly travels from Canada every year to hibernate in central
Mexico between November and February, but its population is showing a
"clear downward trend," said Omar Vidal, director of the World
Wildlife Fund's Mexico office.
A total of
2,179 hectares of forest was lost in its winter homes in the states of Mexico
and Michoacan between 2001 and 2013, Vidal told a news conference on Monday to
present the study published in the journal Conservation Biology.
![]() |
A Monarch
butterfly (Danaus plexippus)
caterpillar feeds on a leaf (AFP, Prakash
Mathema)
|
Over the
past decade, large-scale logging by organized crime groups was responsible for
the loss of 1,503 hectares of forest while small-scale operations by
communities living near the reserve cut down 554 hectares to build homes.
Another 122
hectares were lost due to droughts and floods.
After
peaking between 2005 and 2007, large-scale logging was not a factor last year
thanks to government action to protect the forests as well as private donations
to assist local communities create jobs and conduct community surveillance, the
study found.
In the
United States and Canada, where the Monarch begins its 4,500-kilometer trek,
the use of herbicides has drastically reduced the number of milkweed that
butterfly larvae feed on.
"Neither
the government of Canada nor the United States government are doing what they
need to do to protect the habitat of the Monarch butterfly," Vidal said.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.