ON the first of November, when Mexicans celebrate a holiday called the
Day of the Dead, some also celebrate the millions of monarch butterflies
that, without fail, fly to the mountainous fir forests of central
Mexico on that day. They are believed to be souls of the dead, returned.
This year, for or the first time in memory, the monarch butterflies
didn’t come, at least not on the Day of the Dead. They began to straggle
in a week later than usual, in record-low numbers. Last year’s low of
60 million now seems great compared with the fewer than three million
that have shown up so far this year. Some experts fear that the
spectacular migration could be near collapse.
“It does not look good,” said Lincoln P. Brower, a monarch expert at Sweet Briar College.
It is only the latest bad news about the dramatic decline of insect populations.
Another insect in serious trouble is the wild bee, which has thousands
of species. Nicotine-based pesticides called neonicotinoids are
implicated in their decline, but even if they were no longer used,
experts say, bees, monarchs and many other species of insect would still
be in serious trouble.
For the past 15 years, scientists have been watching monarch numbers plummet, as much as 81 percent between 1999 and 2010.
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Nearly every link in the monarchs’ chain of being, he said, is at risk.
Illegal logging in Mexico has reduced their winter habitat — an already
vanishingly small area, which is itself being altered by the warming
climate. Ecotourists who come to witness the congregation of so many
butterflies disturb the creatures they have come to see. But perhaps
most damaging is the demise of milkweed.
Monarchs have the misfortune to rely exclusively on a plant that farmers
all across the Midwest and Northeast consider a weed. There is a direct
parallel between the demise of milkweeds — killed by the herbicide
glyphosate, which is sprayed by the millions of gallons on fields where
genetically modified crops are growing — and the steady drop in monarch
numbers.
To anyone who has grown up in the Midwest, the result seems very
strange. After decades of trying to eradicate milkweed, gardeners are
being encouraged to plant it in their gardens, and townships and
counties are being asked to let it thrive in the roadside ditches. What
looks like agricultural success, purging bean and corn fields of
milkweed (among other weeds), turns out to be butterfly disaster. This
is the great puzzle of species conservation — it has to be effective at
nearly every stage of a species’ life cycle. And this, too, is the
dilemma of human behavior. We live in a world of unintended consequences
of our own making, which can never be easily undone.
Vishal · 592 weeks ago
I have been following the bee issue for some time but became aware of the monarch butterfly just now...
macgupta 81p · 592 weeks ago