For those of us who grew up in North America, the Monarch was the most recognizable of all butterflies. Large and brilliantly marked with a rich
orange/gold and black pattern they could be seen by the millions
twice a year in their migrations between Canada
and a single Mexican forest region. Their metamorphosis
from a milkweed munching caterpillar
spinning their cocoons to emergence
as a regal flyer was a staple of grade school science
curricula. But all of that is under
a dire threat as populations collapse with the rapid alterations
in their critical Mexican nesting grounds due to global climate change and
threat to their essential milkweed due to dramatic climate change all along their long migration routes.
Nearly ten years ago a report on the
Canadian Broadcasting System (CBC) explained:
Monarch
butterflies appear headed for a perhaps unprecedented population crash,
according to scientists and monarch watchers who have been keeping tabs on the
species in their main summer home in Eastern and Central North America.
There
had been hope that on their journey north from their overwintering zone in
Mexico, the insect’s numbers would build through the generations, but there’s
no indication that happened. Only a small number of monarchs did make it to
Canada this summer to propagate the generation that has now begun its southern
migration to Mexico, and early indications are that the past year's record lows
will be followed by even lower numbers this fall. Elizabeth Howard, the
director and founder of Journey North, a citizen-scientist effort that tracks
the migrations of monarchs and other species, says one indicator for the
robustness of the monarchs is the number of roosts they form in late August and
September, something Journey North monitors throughout the migration periods.
“During migration, monarchs form overnight roosts in places like Point Pelee or
Long Point [in southern Ontario], where the monarchs are congregating before
crossing the Great Lakes, places where people generally see huge overnight
clusters of monarchs gathering.” Howard told CBC News that at this time in
2011, Journey North had already received 55 reports of roosts, followed by just
25 in 2012. This year, only 17 reports of roosts came in. “This is really a
proxy for peak migration because this is where people see really large numbers
of monarchs and we’re just not getting the reports, it’s looking pretty bad,”
she says.
The
monarch butterflies that are now flying south are the fourth generation of
those that left the few hectares in central Mexico where millions of monarchs
spend the winter.
Several years ago, while I was working as a school custodian in Cary, Illinois, the visit of a lone Monarch on its southward migration, a pioneer, inspired a poem that was included in my 2004 Skinner House Books collection We Build Temples in the Heart and was also anthologized by Edward Searl in his compilation In Praise of Animals A Treasury of Poems, Quotations, and Readings.
Some of the science is fuzzy—a single insect does not make the whole epic journey, it takes four generations—but the sense of awe and wonder remains.
And to think we may be the last
generation to experience it…
Migrations
Later they
will come,
the legions of Canada
on the edge of cutting cold,
backs scraping stratus slate,
arrayed in military majesty,
dressed in ranks and counting
cadence,
squadron after squadron, an air
armada,
single minded in their migratory
mission.
But now,
when September sun lingers and
lengthened shadows hint ferocity to
come,
the first glints of gold and black
flit
with seaming aimlessness,
pushed here and there by the
faintest zephyr,
the pioneers of a nation,
descended from Alberta prairies
and Minnesota Lakes.
One will
linger
briefly on my shoulder
if I am blessed, then be off again.
Then, if she
is lucky
she will pause to rest with
the millions along the bend of the
Rio Grande
before finding a winter’s respite of
death
amid deep Mexican forests.
And it will
turn again next spring—
egg to
larva,
larva to silken slumber
pupa to Monarch
Monarch to migration.
Oh ye proud Canada,
mute your boastful
blare—
the mighty
bow before true courage.
—Patrick Murfin
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