$2m to be spent
on growing milkweed and other butterfly-friendly plants along main migration
routes from Minnesota to Mexico as population slumps by 90%
The Guardian, Suzanne Goldenberg, 9 Feb 2015
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A cluster of monarch butterflies in Pacific Grove, California. Photograph: Michael Yang /Rex Features |
The Obama
administration and conservation groups launched a plan on Monday to halt the
death spiral of the monarch butterfly.
The most
familiar of American butterflies, known for their extraordinary migration from
Mexico through the mid-west to Canada, monarch populations have plummetted 90%
over the past 20 years.
Fewer than
50m butterflies made it to Mexico last winter – a fraction of the population
once estimated at 1bn.
Those
numbers mirror the sharp declines of honey bees in recent years.
“We need to
turn that around,” Dan Ashe, director of US Fish and Wildlife Service, told the
Guardian. “If you look at the 20-year trend definitely monarchs are at risk of
vanishing.”
The USFWS
will spend $2m (£1.3m) and work with the National Wildlife Federation and the
National Fish and Wildlife Foundation to grow milkweed and other
butterfly-friendly plants along the monarchs’ main migration routes from
Minnesota to Mexico.
The
initiative aims to restore more than 200,000 acres of habitat through the
spring breeding grounds of Texas and Oklahoma and summer breeding areas in the
Corn Belt, tracking closely to the I-35 highway from Austin, Texas to St Paul,
Minnesota.
There are
also plans to promote wildflowers such as goldenrod and aster along pipeline
and electricity lines.
Monarch
populations have fallen precipitously over the past 20 years because of changes
in farming methods, and the destruction of milkweed that is the caterpillars’
main habitat.
The idea is
to get populations back up to 1bn.
Monarchs showed a slight rebound this year, because of good weather. “That’s a sign we
haven’t yet reached any disastrous tipping point,” Ashe said. “If the habitat
improves, if we make more habitat for them, then the population still seems to
have the ability to respond.”
The Centre
for Biological Diversity went to court last August to seek protection for the
monarch under the endangered species act. Ashe said the petition presented
“substantive evidence” for such protections, and the government was studying
the case.
The centre
welcomed the new initiative – but said protecting the monarchs would be far
more effective.
“I think
it’s great that this voluntary stuff is going to happen,” said Tierra Curry of
the Centre for Biological Diversity. “But if the monarch does get protected
that will open up a lot more funding to protect habitat.”
She went
on: “It’s going to take a massive amount of investment and a massive amount of
milkweed to reverse the decline.”
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