WVXU: Monarchs land on international endangered list

WVXU's Cincinnati Edition turned to a University of Cincinnati biologist to explain why monarch butterflies are in decline and what we can do to help.

The International Union for the Conservation of Nature last month placed monarch butterflies on its "red list" of endangered species, a warning that the species is in decline and at risk of extinction.

UC College of Arts and Sciences assistant professor Patrick Guerra told WVXU that the question of whether the species is in danger of extinction is complicated by the fact that they engage in a multi-generational migration. That makes a census somewhat trickier, he said.

"It really is a question of when you are looking at the population because there are different generations making this journey and what's the metric you use?" he said. "I think the population is going down."

Patrick Guerra holds up a mesh container holding a butterfly,

UC biologist Patrick Guerra works with monarch butterflies. Photo/Lisa Ventre/UC

Guerra said monarchs are important pollinators for various species of flowering plant. But more than that, we can learn a lot from their incredible navigational abilities, he said.

A study this year by Guerra found that nighttime light pollution can interfere with their uncanny navigational abilities. Guerra found that butterflies roosting at night near artificial illumination such as a porch light can become disoriented the next day because the light interferes with their circadian rhythms. Artificial light can impede the molecular processes responsible for the butterfly's remarkable navigational ability and trigger the butterfly to take wing when it should be resting.

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service in 2020 said the monarch butterfly warranted protection under the federal Endangered Species Act, but was precluded because of other species that had higher protection priorities.

"The IUCN red listing is a call to action," Guerra said. "I think they will be placed on the Endangered Species List."

Guerra said people can plant milkweed around their homes and gardens and turn off outdoor lights where possible.

Listen to WVXU's Cincinnati Edition.

UC biology research on Monarch butterflies at the Cincinnati Zoo & Botanical Garden. Patrick Guerra, assistant professor of biological sciences, is doing research on how Monarch butterflies navigate. These butterflies take multiple generations to go to and from the same mountains of Mexico every few years. He's studying local butterflies at the UC Center for Field Studies, the Cincinnati Nature Center and the Cincinnati Zoo. Pictured here is Alexis Moore, 21, a biomedical engineering student from Columbus, Ohio assiting Patrick with the research.

UC assistant professor Patrick Guerra and his students work with monarch butterflies at the Cincinnati Zoo & Botanical Garden. Photo/Lisa Ventre/UC

/University Release. This material from the originating organization/author(s) might be of the point-in-time nature, and edited for clarity, style and length. Mirage.News does not take institutional positions or sides, and all views, positions, and conclusions expressed herein are solely those of the author(s).View in full here.