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In the News
Monarch Recovery!
The
Lloyd Center for the Environment just
received notification from Monarch Watch
that one of the Monarch butterflies tagged
by students from Westport Elementary School
was recovered in the El Rosario reserve in
Mexico. The butterfly had traveled 2,290
from Westport to the over-wintering grounds
in the mountains of central Mexico!
The Lloyd Center has partnered with Monarch
Watch, since 1997 to offer the program
Mysterious Monarch Migration for elementary
and middle school children. The 90 minute
program allows students to actively
participate in an international research
project helping scientists discover how
Monarch butterflies navigate their way to
Mexico every fall and helping to asses the
population status. The program has been
supported in Westport through a generous
grant from Lees Supermarket.
Monarch butterflies weigh less than a dime
but travel thousands of miles every fall to
the over-wintering grounds in the mountains
of central Mexico. Why Mexico?
Over-wintering Monarchs need a climate that
is cold enough to slow down their metabolism
but will not freeze the butterflies. The
Oyamel forests in central Mexico provide the
right conditions, the daytime temperatures
may reach 50 degrees with the nighttime
temperatures falling to 32 degrees. Monarchs
freeze at approximately 28 degrees.
In our area, Monarch butterfly migration
takes place from September until
mid-October. The migrating butterflies feed
on nectar to gain carbohydrates to fuel
their daily activities and to help maintain
the buildup of fat in their abdomens. In
this area, goldenrods are the main source of
nectar. The Monarch butterflies that migrate
to Mexico in the fall will never make the
return trip. They will leave the wintering
roosts by the end of February or early March
and begin moving northward. Females will lay
their eggs on milkweed plants along their
route north. These butterflies will die in
the southern United States and their
offspring will continue the journey
northward. Thus no individual monarch
returns to their birth place in the northern
United States. Also, no butterfly that
leaves New England in the fall has ever been
to Mexico, they are approximately four
generations removed from the Monarchs that
migrated the previous year! Yet every year
the Monarchs find their way to the same
over-wintering areas in Mexico! This is part
of the mystery of their migration, one that
scientists hope to solve by tagging
butterflies in the fall and recovering the
tags along the migration route.
The
tags are placed on the hind wings of the
butterflies and do not impede their flight.
Each tag has a unique letter/number
sequence. The taggers record the id number,
location where the butterfly was tagged,
whether it was male or female and other
information on weather or the health of the
butterfly. The data sheets are submitted to
Monarch Watch at the University of Kansas.
They collate all of the data and notify
taggers if one of their butterflies was
recovered during its migration or
over-wintering in Mexico.
According to Tricia Sheppard, Education
Director for the Lloyd Center, this is the
Center’s third butterfly recovered. “We had
one recovered in Palacios, Texas, along the
Gulf Coast on its way to Mexico. That
butterfly had traveled 1,667 miles in 47
days. The other butterfly was recovered in
Port St. Lucie, Florida and had traveled
1,122 miles. Scientists are not sure if the
butterfly recovered in Florida was on its
way to Mexico or if the Monarchs over-winter
somewhere in Florida or the Caribbean.”
Sheppard added, “It is very exciting when we
receive notification that one of the
butterflies we tagged was recovered
thousands of miles away. We notify all of
the schools that participated in the program
so they can find the location on a map. For
the students from the school that actually
tagged the butterfly it is even more
exciting!” The program allows students to
learn about the life-cycle and migration of
these incredible insects but it also brings
in geography. Students can discover a lot
about geography, climate, ecology and even
math through this program.
For more information about the Monarch
tagging program or any of the other
educational programs offered by the Lloyd
Center log onto www.lloydcenter.org or call
508-990-0505 ext. 14. For more information
about Monarch Watch, log onto their web-site
at www.MonarchWatch.org.
The Lloyd Center is located on 55 acres of
pristine salt marsh, maritime forest and
wetlands at the mouth of the Slocums River
in Dartmouth. The nature center is free and
open to the public Monday – Friday from 8:30
a.m. – 4:00 p.m. and on Sundays from 11:00
a.m. – 4:00 p.m. The trails are open dawn to
dusk 365 days a year.
The nature center has a 17-foot pilot whale
skeleton; a touch tank with spider crabs,
hermit crabs, periwinkles, knobbed whelks,
green crabs and other estuarine organisms; a
leatherback turtle skeleton; fresh and salt
water aquaria and a panoramic view of
Buzzards Bay.
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