As the group made its way up the rugged mountain path toward
the clearing, their heavy, crunching bootsteps turned to near-silent tiptoeing,
their friendly chitchat dropped to whispers, giddy smiles appeared on faces and
eyes brimmed with tears. The first-time visitors to this mountain monarch
butterfly reserve were, in a word, gobsmacked, AP reported.
It’s challenging to convey the sheer magic of witnessing
tens of thousands of butterflies hanging from trees in giant clumps, sunning
themselves on the hillside or fluttering in the sky like snowflakes. But after
experiencing it, it’s easier to understand folks like these, most of whom had
traveled from the US to Mexico solely to see the monarchs.
“Our trip was amazing,” said Denise Siraco, who was visiting
from New Hampshire. “There are really no words to describe it. When we found
the colony, it seemed to go on forever.”
In the US, two separate populations of monarchs are divided
by the Rocky Mountains. While the western population primarily sticks to the California
coast, the eastern population makes its way down from southern Canada and the
northeastern United States across thousands of miles to spend the winter at one
of about 20 colonies in the Mexican states of Michoacán and Mexico. No single
insect completes the entire journey as the average butterfly only lives about a
month. Instead, it takes three or four generations to make the trip, with each
one traveling part of the way.
The exception is a “super-generation” of monarchs that lives
eight times longer than their relatives. These super-monarchs can travel 50 or
100 miles a day, riding on thermal air currents as high as a mile above the
ground, according to the US Department of Agriculture.
When they reach Mexico, they roost in trees, like the cedar
and oak at Cerro Pelon, and cluster together to stay warm.
A recent group of butterfly watchers saw thousands clumped
together in what looked like huge hornets’ nests hanging from branches that can
break from the weight of the insects, explained guide Ellen Sharp, who, along
with her husband, Joel Moreno Rojas, runs a butterfly business in nearby
Macheros.
“No one is entirely sure why they choose these trees,” Sharp
said. “But one of the reasons is the microclimate. The old-growth trees radiate
heat, so they stay warm through the winter.” The monarchs generally arrive at
the beginning of November and are headed north by mid-March.
The western population has declined dramatically in recent
years. Last November, surveyors at 97 sites found 20,456 monarchs compared to
148,000 at the same sites in 2017, according to Xerces, a nonprofit
conservation group. Reasons for the decrease include climate change, habitat
loss and pesticide use.
But the eastern population is rising. Several rangers at
Cerro Pelón who were born and raised in the area said they haven’t seen
butterflies in their current numbers since they were children. And the latest
numbers support their observations.
At the end of January, Mexican officials announced that the
overall population of monarch butterflies wintering in central Mexico was up
144 percent over the previous year. The monarch population, like that of other
insects, fluctuates widely depending on a variety of factors, but scientists
say the recoveries after each big dip tend to be smaller, suggesting a decline
in the number migrating from Canada and the United States. This winter’s
population figure, however, was the largest since 2006-2007.
One of the biggest threats to monarch populations is
believed to be the destruction of milkweed along their migration routes. There
is a movement among gardeners across North America to plant milkweed, the sole
host for the monarchs’ eggs and only food for the caterpillars.
In Mexico, the area of forest inhabited by monarchs has
increased 144 percent from 2017 to 2018, to nearly 15 acres of land, according
to World Wildlife Fund Mexico and its partners. Researchers found eight
butterfly colonies inside the Monarch Butterfly Biosphere Reserve and six
colonies outside it. The largest colony covered a bit more than 6 acres of
forest.
Sharp and Moreno began their business in 2012 and believe
they’re doing their part to ensure the continued butterfly rebound. While locals
always knew the butterflies were there — many believed they were the souls of
people who had died in the past year — there was no tourism infrastructure.
After the butterflies’ overwintering sites in Mexico were
discovered by naturalists and scientists in 1975, and then publicized by
National Geographic magazine the following year, a patron from a nearby town
decided to hire three men from Macheros to work as rangers to protect the
forest. One of those men was Rojas’ father, who retired in 2014.
Since then, in addition to operating a growing
bed-and-breakfast and butterfly-tour business with a dozen local workers, he
and Sharp formed a nonprofit and hired four full-time rangers who now spend
their days in the forest. So now, a total of seven men are in the woods
full-time from November to March. They help prevent illegal logging and keep
the forest clean.
“It’s so much bigger than we are. It’s this constant cycle.
They keep coming back again and again,” Sharp said. “It’s ‘awe’ in the old
sense of the word. There should still be things in nature that are
awe-inspiring.”