The Monarch Butterfly Population More Than Triples After Falling For Years

March 7, 2016

Three-and-a-half times as many monarch butterflies as the year before returned to their home in the central Mexico mountains this winter.

monarch butterfly population triples
Photo credit: Pablo Leautaud

Each year, the butterflies migrate 3,400 miles south to the tropical climate. Their numbers had been falling in recent years, until a resurgence in 2014. This year's increase has been even greater.

Instead of counting all the individual butterflies, scientists and conservationists add up all the land area the monarchs cover. This winter it came to 10 acres of butterflies — up from a record low of 1.66 acres just two years earlier.

It's a great recovery, but still has a long way to go to match the 44 acres of butterflies from 1996.

Mexico, the U.S., and Canada have all committed to helping the monarchs recover. The U.S. is reintroducing milkweed plants along 1,100 square-miles of the monarchs’ migration route to make up for herbicide use destroying huge tracts of the plant. Monarchs lay their eggs on milkweed exclusively, and find it a vital food source.

Mexico successfully cracked down on illegal logging in the monarch reserve, where the butterflies rely on the forest canopy to help shelter them during winter.

Conservationists estimate 140 million monarchs arrived this year, and if the upward trend continues they will hit their goal of seeing 220 million by 2020.

"It is time for celebration because we see the beginning of success," U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Director Ashe told the Associated Press. "But our task now is to continue building on that success."

(h/t) Good News Network


Click Here For The Most Popular On Sunny Skyz

feel good videoWOW! Seal Begs Boaters For Help As Orcas Hunt Him

feel good storiesMom Shares 4th Grader's Spelling Test Answers, #13 Has Everyone Laughing

feel good storiesThis Letter From C. S. Lewis To His Goddaughter, For Whom He Wrote 'The Lion, The Witch And The Wardrobe'

feel good storiesThese Twin Cats Do Everything Together — And We Can’t Get Enough

feel good storiesCat Goes Viral For Playing Cards Against Humanity — And She’s Serving Pure Chaos

feel good storiesToddler ‘Arrested’ After Taking One Bite Out Of Every Fruit

feel good videoMan Spends 6 Months Teaching An Octopus To Play Piano

feel good videoDrone Stumbles Upon Polar Bears Living Their Best Life In Abandoned Soviet Research Station

feel good videoMom Catches Dad–Daughter Moment On Baby Monitor And Starts Sobbing

feel good videoToddler’s Wholesome Reaction To Dad Being 'Left Out' Goes Viral

feel good videoDog Won’t Stop Checking The Same Spot Outside, And The Reason Has Every Pet Owner Laughing

Chris Filippou 12:17 PM (3 minutes ago) to me