Monarchs' Winter Habitat Loss Looms in Mexico!Once again, the mysterious fall migration of monarch butterflies is underway. These amazing "flying flowers" instinctively know when it's time to leave their summer habitats in North America and Canada and make their way south to Mexico -- a flight of about 3,000 miles. For millenniums, hundreds of millions of monarchs have roosted in the Oyamel Fir forests in Mexico where they will remain until spring. Their remote overwintering site--located on the Transvolcanic Plateau--lies deep in the mountainous forests between the states of Mexico and Michoacan. It is there that these colorful orange and black monarch butterflies cling in such immense clusters that they literally shroud the fir trees, much like a thick patchwork quilt. Will these magnificent monarchs find their winter habitat in the Oyamel forests in Mexico waiting for them as usual? OR, will they still have this special haven in which to roost in winters to come? Read on, friends and fellow monarch enthusiasts, for a summary of some grave and startling facts that currently threaten this famous monarch habitat. News and film coverage sparked by Mastervision, an educational video company, attracted media coverage to the event from ABC, CBS, Highlights and Significance of the Monarchs' Winter Habitat Loss The director of Monarch Watch, Prof. Orley Taylor of the University of Kansas, emphasized the following points in his speech: Conservation of the monarch migration is a significant concern. In good years as many as 500 million monarchs in eastern North America migrate to Mexico, where they overwinter in Oyamel Fir forests on mountain tops in a relatively small area west of Mexico City. |