Western monarch butterfly populations are far from recovered after winter storms left the population of the delicate insects in tatters. The recent count of the overwintering population across California was 30% lower than last year’s count, according to researchers.
“Last year’s winter storms meant we entered the spring breeding season with fewer butterflies and saw lower numbers this summer, so it is not surprising that the overwintering population is down,” said Emma Pelton, a monarch conservation biologist with the Xerces Society. “It’s difficult to predict how conditions during any single year will influence the population, but we do know that western monarch numbers need to be much higher before we consider this a recovery.”
Monarchs stop laying eggs for the winter and cluster in protected coastal groves from the northern Baja Peninsula to northern California from October through March. The insects focus on preserving energy for migration. About 76% of the western monarchs overwinter in Central California. One small grove in Pismo Beach hosted more than 16,000 monarchs in November.
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The number of butterflies dropped by more than half from Xerces’ November 2022 count to their January 2023 count. The 58% drop was the greatest of the count’s 27-year record due to the seemingly relentless parade of atmospheric river-fueled storms. They killed butterflies but also damaged the groves where monarchs cluster for protection from winter storms, rain, strong wind and freezing temperatures. The damage provided less shelter this winter.
“In California, especially last year, we had the atmospheric rivers that were back-to-back, through January,” said Isis Howard, Endangered Species Conservation Biologist for the Xerces Society. “We saw a lot of our trees fall in overwintering sites, causing changes to the overwintering groves, allowing more wind, more rain, etc., to enter the groves and disrupt the monarch butterflies that were clustering there for protection.”
Over 400 volunteers counted 233,394 butterflies across 256 California sites. Last winter, the November count, which is traditionally the peak overwintering time, totaled more than 330,000.
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“When populations are low, small changes in factors like temperature, rainfall, predation and availability of milkweed and nectar resources can strongly influence each generation’s survival rates,” explained Howard.
Population numbers are at a mere 5% compared to the low millions counted in the 1980s. Pelton said “the bottom fell out” in 2018, 2019 and 2020 when counters found less than 30,000 each year. Since then, numbers have slowly improved.
“So we have bounced back, but we haven’t bounced back fully,” said Pelton.
Despite the precipitous decline, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service has not listed the insect under the Endangered Species Act.
“In December 2020, after an extensive status assessment of the monarch butterfly, we determined that listing the monarch under the Endangered Species Act is warranted but precluded at this time by higher priority listing actions,” stated USFWS. “With this finding, the monarch butterfly becomes a candidate for listing; we will review its status each year until we are able to begin developing a proposal to list the monarch.”
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USFWS is court-mandated to reconsider listing the butterfly by the end of the fiscal year, the end of September.
“Unless something had really changed dramatically in the population status in Mexico or California, which it really hasn’t, I think by any objective measure, the overwintering numbers in Mexico have been the same or going down, similar to the West that we anticipate that they will list the monarch and that that could come out as soon as this fall,” said Pelton.
Howard said the year-to-year fluctuations are common in declining invertebrate populations.
Both the eastern and the western monarch numbers are down. USFWS points to the conversion of grasslands to agriculture, urban development, widespread use of herbicides, logging/thinning at overwintering sites in Mexico, unsuitable management of overwintering groves in California, drought, use of insecticides and climate change for the decrease.
Western monarchs stay west of the Rockies, while the population of eastern monarchs stay east of the Rockies. Generation after generation of monarchs fly to the same winter site, often the same tree, year after year.
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Howard said the monarch counts are essential for the future of all pollinators. The U.S. Department of Agriculture estimates that pollinators are responsible for one out of three bites of food Americans take.
“Monarch butterflies are a flagship species,” Howard said. “In other words, they’re sort of the poster child for butterfly and pollinator conservation efforts.”
“So this is one reason why we emphasize the plight of the monarch, and we put a lot of energy and effort into preserving monarchs,” she added. “They also indicate the declines of other at-risk butterflies, bees, moths, beetles, that are happening across North America and beyond. So, the declines in monarchs reflect the declines in other beneficial insects and pollinators.”
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Xerces holds virtual and field training every fall for volunteers. Each one painstakingly counts butterflies in a section of a tree and then estimates numbers for the entire tree. FOX Weather spoke to a volunteer previously. Counters head out in the cool mornings when the animals are in torpor or paralyzed by the cold.
Volunteers are completing the January count, which will enable Xerces to tabulate a final number for the winter of 2023/24.
“The data from the western monarch count informs conservation efforts, and it allows scientists to make informed decisions to protect monarchs and their winter habitat,” said Howard.