Coastal Shopper and News

Page 10 - Wednesday, November 8, 2023 - November 22, 2023 - Coastal Shopper & News

Marvelous Monarchs: The Remarkable Migration of the Monarch Butterfly CCHS HOMECOMING Molly’ s OLD SOUTH MEMORIES STORIES OF CAMDEN COUNTY’S HISTORY BY MOLLY SILVER

same forests each year, and some even nd the same tree their ancestors landed on.

journey before. How remarkable that these beautiful insects participate in a process which they will never see to completion! Their inspiring journey makes me realize that worthwhile results take time, patience, and hard work. What lesson does it teach you? Molly Silver is owner and tour guide at Molly’s Old South Tours, offering daily tours of St. Marys and Cumberland Island. For information and tour reservations, go to mollysoldsouth.com or call 904 735-8243. You may nd all of her Coastal Shopper articles under “Blogs” on her website at mollysoldsouth.com. Follow Molly’s Old South Tours on social media: https://www.facebook.com/MollysOldSouth https://www.instagram.com/mollysoldsouth/

Monarch caterpillar. Britannica.com

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Maybe you have noticed it: the ash of brilliant orange wings itting by before gently alighting on a nearby nectar bush. This is a sign that monarch butter ies are on the move. As they make their massive fall migration south, you may spot them in Southeast Georgia. Below, learn more about these

Around March when northerly migration commences, monarchs in Mexico become sexually mature and mate. The males then die, while the females head north, depositing eggs on milkweed plants along the way. These females eventually die themselves, and their offspring continue the northward migration. It takes three to ve generations to repopulate the United States and southern Canada. Finally, the last generation of the year hatches and begins the return journey to overwintering grounds in Mexico. A single monarch can travel hundreds or even thousands of miles. The recapture of marked butter ies has revealed they can travel as far as eighty miles in one day. The longest distance recorded for the complete ight of a single migrant monarch butter y is 1,870 miles. Although scientists believe North American monarchs have been making their remarkable annual journey for thousands of years, threats to their habitat and food sources are making this migration more difficult. Habitat destruction in areas where they spend the winter has taken a massive toll. In their summer habitats, herbicides kill both native nectar plants where adult monarchs feed as well as the milkweed their caterpillars need as host plants. Insecticides kill the monarchs themselves. Since the 1990s, the monarch population has declined by approximately ninety percent, placing them on the endangered species list. How can you help? Plant pesticide-free native milkweed in your yard so that monarch butter ies can lay their eggs and the caterpillars have food to eat. The species of milkweed native to southeast Georgia is “Large ower Milkweed,” or Asclepias connivens. Planting locally native species is the best way to help monarchs; the butter ies have coevolved with native plants, and their life cycles are in sync with each other. Visit nwf.org/nativeplant nder to nd other plants native to our area and the wildlife they support. The monarch butter y’s migration is one of the greatest phenomena in the natural world. Scientists still are not sure how migrating monarchs know where to go when each individual has never made the

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delicate insects and their incredible journey.

Monarch butter ies, which are found across North America, are iconic for their distinctive deep orange coloring with black veining and bodies. This acts as a “Don’t Eat Me” sign, alerting predators the insect is poisonous. Monarchs’ toxicity comes from milkweed, the caterpillars’ only food source. As they feed, the caterpillars store up toxins in their body, which remain in their system even into adulthood. Although an animal which eats a monarch butter y usually does not die, it feels sick enough to avoid eating them in the future. Most adult monarchs only live a few weeks as they search for food in the form of ower nectar, for mates, and for milkweed on which to lay their eggs. The last generation to hatch in late summer delays sexual maturity – living as long as eight months – to undertake a spectacular fall migration, one of the few insects to do so.

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The great monarch migration. Worldwildlife.org

From September to early October, millions of these insects begin their southerly fall migration from as far north as southern Canada. Monarchs in the east travel down the Atlantic coast, with many stopping at Florida’s Panhandle (St. Mark’s National Wildlife Refuge in this area is optimal for viewing migrating monarchs, as they are attracted to its saltbushes). They then y over the Gulf Coast to central Mexico, nearly 2,500 miles from their starting point. Some estimates say up to a billion butter ies arrive in Mexico each year. There in the r forests of Mexico’s mountains, they hibernate for the winter in sheltered sites, particularly on trees, where they cluster on trunks and big branches. These international travelers return to the

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Monarch butterflies on saltbushes, St. Marks National Wildlife Refuge, Crawfordville, Florida

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