Monarch Butterflies Are Endangered Species Now

  • last month
Monarch butterflies are now listed as endangered.
Transcript
00:00The Migratory Monarch Butterfly has joined the endangered species list this week.
00:05The IUCN indicated that the butterfly is facing a high risk of extinction in the wild.
00:10The Migratory Monarch weighs less than a gram, but performs one of the most amazing journeys in the animal kingdom.
00:15Migratory Monarchs travel from wintering grounds in Mexico and California
00:19to breeding grounds in Canada and the northern United States.
00:22A migration can stretch up to 2,500 miles and a full cycle takes months.
00:27To survive the journey, monarchs rely on rest stops in specific habitats that provide winter shelter for the insects.
00:33Monarchs also rely on milkweed, the only plant their caterpillars can feed on.
00:37However, forest habitats in Mexico and California are threatened by clear-cutting for agriculture and development,
00:43not to mention wildfires that have been exacerbated by climate change.
00:47Meanwhile, pesticide use kills monarchs directly while herbicides kill milkweed.
00:51Drought is also killing milkweed, and early monarch migrations triggered by warming temperatures
00:56may mean that the monarchs are beginning their journey before milkweed is even available.
01:00IUCN estimates that the native population of Migratory Monarchs has shrunk between 22 and 72 percent in the past 10 years.
01:07The western population of these butterflies has shrunk by 99.9 percent,
01:12from a population of 10 million in the 1980s to less than 2,000 today.
01:16In 2020, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service found that adding the monarch to the U.S. Endangered Species List was, quote,
01:24meaning that the butterfly met criteria for listing under the Endangered Species Act,
01:29but that the FWS did not at the time have enough resources to prioritize the listing due to other, more pressing listing needs.
01:36Anna Walker, a member of IUCN's Butterfly and Moth Specialist Group
01:40and a Species Survival Officer at the New Mexico Biopark Society, said in a statement,
01:50But there are signs of hope.
01:52Many people and organizations have come together to try and protect this butterfly and its habitats.
01:57From planting native milkweed and reducing pesticide use,
02:00to supporting the protection of overwintering sites, and contributing to community science,
02:05we all have a role to play in making sure this iconic insect makes a full recovery.