Print

Monarch Butterfly

Following on from our recent report, "GM crops helping drive monarch butterfly decline", here's a study detailing the catastrophic loss in monarch butterfly populations, which the authors say coincides with the introduction of GM glyphosate-tolerant crops.

 

The herbicide has killed off milkweed, which monarch butterfly larvae feed on. The authors add that the situation will get worse as GM glyphosate-tolerant crops expand.

Rescue measures suggested by the authors include monarch-friendly roadside management programs, where the blanket mowing and mass spraying of herbicide on roadsides is replaced with the planting of milkweed.

You can read and download the study in full here.
---
---
Milkweed loss in agricultural fields because of herbicide use: effect on the monarch butterfly population

JOHN M. PLEASANTS and KAREN S. OBERHAUSER

Insect Conservation and Diversity 6(2): 135–144.

http://www.mlmp.org/results/findings/Pleasants_and_Oberhauser_2012_milkweed_loss_in_ag_fields.pdf

Abstract

  1. The size of the Mexican overwintering population of monarch butterflies has decreased over the last decade. Approximately half of these butterflies come from the U.S. Midwest where larvae feed on common milkweed. There has been a large decline in milkweed in agricultural fields in the Midwest over the last decade. This loss is coincident with the increased use of glyphosate herbicide in conjunction with increased planting of genetically modified (GM) glyphosate-tolerant corn (maize) and soybeans (soya).
  2. We investigate whether the decline in the size of the overwintering population can be attributed to a decline in monarch production owing to a loss of milkweeds in agricultural fields in the Midwest. We estimate Midwest annual monarch production using data on the number of monarch eggs per milkweed plant for milkweeds in different habitats, the density of milkweeds in different habitats, and the area occupied by those habitats on the landscape.
  3. We estimate that there has been a 58% decline in milkweeds on the Midwest landscape and an 81% decline in monarch production in the Midwest from 1999 to 2010. Monarch production in the Midwest each year was positively correlated with the size of the subsequent overwintering population in Mexico. Taken together, these results strongly suggest that a loss of agricultural milkweeds is a major contributor to the decline in the monarch population.
  4. The smaller monarch population size that has become the norm will make the species more vulnerable to other conservation threats.