San Francisco Chronicle & LabRoots & 314 Action – 2019-01-26 23:57:05
https://www.sfchronicle.com/news/article/California-s-most-famous-butterfly-nearing-13539657.php
California’s Most Famous Butterfly Nearing Death Spiral
Peter Fimrite / San Francisco Chronicle
(January 17, 2019) — An alarming, precipitous drop in the western monarch butterfly population in California this winter could spell doom for the species, a scenario that biologists say could also plunge bug-eating birds and other species into similar death spirals.
Only 28,429 of the striking orange-and-black butterflies were counted at 213 sites in California, an 86 percent drop from a year ago, according to the final tally of the annual Thanksgiving and New Year’s counts released Thursday by the Xerces Society for Invertebrate Conservation.
That’s a 99.4 percent decline since the 1980s, an all-time low for the Pacific Coast, where an estimated 10 million monarchs once blanketed trees from Marin County to the Baja California peninsula, providing, by all accounts, a spectacular winter display of color.
Scientists knew things were bad for the western monarch, but then “there was this other order of magnitude drop,” said Emma Pelton, a conservation biologist for the Xerces Society, an international nonprofit whose mission is to protect invertebrates and their habitats. “It’s mind-boggling. We’re now down below 1 percent of the historic population.”
The death of monarchs does not bode well for other insects, like bees, or bird species that make their living eating insects.
“It is very apt to say this is a canary in a coal mine for a lot of our native pollinators,” Pelton said. “There’s a tight link in a loss of insects and our songbirds, which rely on insects. We have declines in songbirds, and I think that links directly to declines in insects.”
The die-off has been blamed on a variety of things, including urban sprawl, the spraying of pesticides and herbicides on corn and soybean crops, and the plowing under of the monarch’s milkweed habitat along their migratory route.
A University of Michigan experiment published in July found that higher carbon dioxide levels have reduced a natural toxin in milkweed that feeding monarch caterpillars utilize to fight off parasites. The study showed a 77 percent reduction in parasite tolerance in the butterflies hatched on milkweed grown under high concentrations of carbon dioxide, which comes from car and factory emissions and is what scientists say is the primary cause of climate change.
If nothing is done, Pelton said, the California butterflies, first observed by a Russian expedition looking for a passage across the Arctic Ocean in 1816, could be on an “extinction vortex,” a time when there are not enough butterflies left to recover.
Nobody knows how low the monarch population can go before it’s too late, but a 2017 study funded by The US Fish and Wildlife Service and published in the journal Biological Conservation calculated that the point of no return would likely come when there are fewer than 30,000 butterflies.
“If this prediction is true, we are now below the quasi-extinction threshold,” Pelton said. “This is a crisis.”
There are two major migrations of monarch butterflies — the eastern and western populations — which scientists believe divide themselves at the Rocky Mountains when they head south for the winter from their summer homes in Canada and the Pacific Northwest.
The more abundant eastern monarchs, which spend their winters in Mexico instead of California, are famous because they cover whole sections of forest in a kaleidoscope of color. It is the largest insect migration in the world, but it too is in trouble. The eastern monarchs have declined more than 90 percent since 1996, when scientists estimated there were 1 billion nesting in the trees.
The journeys of both populations are remarkable in that it takes several generations of butterflies to make the six- to nine-month-long trek south for the winter. When they head back, starting in February or March, the mothers will die after laying eggs on milkweed, where the caterpillars grow up. Once they are ready to fly, the young butterflies somehow know where to go, without ever having even seen their mothers.
The California population is declining at an average of 7 percent a year, according to the 2017 Fish and Wildlife study. At the time, there were about 300,000 monarchs in California. That’s slightly worse than the 6 percent drop seen in the eastern monarch population.
In all, monarch populations in North America have plunged more than 95 percent since the 1980s, researchers have said.
The Xerces Society is urging governments to begin identifying butterfly habitat and adopt monarch management plans that would protect nesting sites from logging or inappropriate trimming.
The group recommends that Californians begin growing milkweed and other native plants that produce nectar, especially flowers that bloom in early spring. People should stop using pesticides, especially neonicotinoids, and herbicides, Xerces officials said.
“This is a really important butterfly to our shared understanding of the natural world,” Pelton said. “Everybody has a personal story about finding a caterpillar or having a butterfly land on their finger, even if you are in a city. So from a human side of it, they are huge connectors of people and places. Doing nothing is not an option.”
Monarchs in Trouble
Western monarch butterflies spend the winter in more than 300 forested groves along the California coast, including large populations in Riverside and Los Angeles counties, Pacific Grove, Monterey and at Natural Bridges State Beach in Santa Cruz. They can normally be seen from November to March.
With the number of butterflies declining rapidly, here are four things governments and the public can do to help:
* Protect and manage California overwintering sites.
* Restore breeding and migratory habitat in California, particularly habitat along the coast range, foothills and Sacramento Valley.
* Stop spraying pesticides and herbicides near milkweed, their primary habitat.
* Protect, manage, and restore summer breeding and fall migration habitat outside of California.
Trump’s Wall Would Destroy National Butterfly Center
Kathryn DeMuth Sullivan / LabRoots
Hundreds of thousands of butterflies pass through the center’s 100-acre sanctuary in Mission every year, including the well-known monarch and endangered manfreda giant-skipper. Two hundred and forty species call the center home for at least part of the year.
But if President Trump gets his way with the wall, the protected habitat of the National Butterfly Center along the Rio Grande is in trouble. Executive director, Marianna Wright, commented that 70 percent of the land would eventually be on the other side the wall, meaning visitors would no longer be able to see many of the beautiful butterflies that populate the area. If the butterflies stay, that is.
“Just like farmers get crop yield in acres and inches, we get butterflies based on what we have planted in acres and inches,” Wright said. “So, having a wide swath of our property bulldozed is going to negatively impact the volume of the species and diversity of the species.”
Colorado Sen. Michael Bennet responds to Ted Cruz’ defense of Trump’s border wall.
ACTION ALERT:
Trump Loves Despots But He Must Hate Monarchs
314 Action
A massive decline in number of monarch butterflies could be a sign of an approaching “co-extinction” catastrophe.
In a 2017 study, scientists estimated that the monarch butterfly population in western North America had a 72 percent chance of becoming near extinct in 20 years. Last year saw an estimated 86 percent decline from the previous year, part of a calamitous 97 percent decline in the total population since the 1980s. And Donald Trump wants to make it worse for these embattled monarchs.
A desperate petition launched by 314 Action warns: “Trump to Trample Butterflies with Bigly Border Wall.” Turns out the Trump plan would not only be costly and ineffective, it would require the gutting of 28 critical environmental laws and necessitate the bulldozing of the “most diverse butterfly sanctuary†in the United States.
Time to go to bat for the butterflies. Write letter, make phone calls and plant lots of milkweed in your garden. (We did and, sure enough, some Monarchs settled in.)