Monarch Butterfly Fact Sheet | Blog | Nature | PBS (2024)

Monarch Butterfly Fact Sheet | Blog | Nature | PBS (1)

Monarch Butterfly (Danaus plexippu): Danaus plexippus in Greek means “sleepy transformation.” The name evokes the species’ ability to hibernate and metamorphize.

Kingdom: | Animalia
Phylum: | Arthropoda
Class: | Insecta
Order: | Lepidoptera
Genus: | Danaus
Species: | plexippu

Monarch butterflies are one of the most recognizable species of butterflies in North America. They are widely known for their incredible migratory pattern. They travel between 1,200 and 2,800 miles or more to their overwintering spots in Mexico and Southern California from the northern United States and Canada. Once there, the butterflies hibernate in the mountain forests, where a less extreme climate provides them a better chance to survive.

Monarch Butterfly Fact Sheet | Blog | Nature | PBS (2)

Size and Weight:

A monarch butterfly typically weighs less than half a gram. Its wingspan is about 4 inches. The male butterflies are typically larger than the females.

Appearance:

Monarch butterflies are well-known for their appearance. Adult monarch butterflies possess two pairs of brilliant orange-red wings, featuring black veins and white spots along the edges. The males possess distinguishing black dots along the veins of their wings. Their orange color alerts predators to stay away.

As caterpillars, Monarchs are striped with yellow, black and white bands. Monarch caterpillars have a set of antennae-like tentacles at each end of their body. They reach about two inches in length before metamorphosis. The monarch chrysalis, where the caterpillar undergoes metamorphosis into the winged adult butterfly, is seafoam green with tiny yellow spots along its edge.

Monarch Butterfly Fact Sheet | Blog | Nature | PBS (3)

Diet:

As caterpillars, Monarchs feed on the leaves of milkweed. Milkweed produces glycoside toxins to deter animals from eating them. As they feed, monarch caterpillars store up the toxins in their body, making them taste bad. This will in turn deter their predators from eating them. The toxins remain in their system even after metamorphosis, protecting them as adult butterflies as well.

As adults, monarchs feed on nectar from a wide range of blooming native plants, including milkweed.

Habitat:

Monarch butterflies live in forests and mountains.

Monarch Butterfly Fact Sheet | Blog | Nature | PBS (4)

Geography:

Monarch butterflies can be found in North America. They are broken into two populations separated by the Rocky Mountains, called the eastern and the western populations.

Monarchs are one of few migratory insects. In the summer, they range as far north as southern Canada. In the fall, the eastern population migrates to the cool, high mountains of central Mexico and the western population migrates to coastal California, where they spend the winter.

Breeding:

Monarch butterflies communicate with scents and colors. To mate, the males attract females by releasing chemicals from scent glands on their hind wings.

During the spring and summer, an adult monarch spends its several week lifespan mating and searching for food. Adult females lay eggs singly on milkweed.

Monarch Butterfly Fact Sheet | Blog | Nature | PBS (5)

Life Cycle:

Monarchs lay their eggs on milkweed. After three to five days, the egg will hatch. These eggs hatch into monarch caterpillars, which feed exclusively on milkweed. The caterpillars grow and molt several times over roughly a two-week period. After this period, they will form a chrysalis in which they undergo metamorphosis. After another two weeks within the chrysalis, they will emerge as adult butterflies.

Most adult monarchs only live for a few weeks, searching for food in the form of flower nectar, for mates, and for milkweed on which to lay their eggs. However, the last generation, which occurs in late summer, delays sexual maturity and undertakes a fall migration.

Annual Life Cycle:

The annual monarch life cycle and migration begins at the monarchs’ overwintering grounds in Mexico and California. In March, the overwintering monarchs begin their journey north. Once the northern migration begins, monarchs become sexually mature and mate. After mating and egg-laying, the adult butterflies die and the northward migration is continued by their offspring.

It takes three to five generations to repopulate the rest of the United States and southern Canada until the final generation of the year hatches and does the return journey to the overwintering grounds.

Lifespan:

Each adult butterfly lives only about four to five weeks. However, the migratory generation can live upward of eight months.

Monarch Butterfly Fact Sheet | Blog | Nature | PBS (6)

Threats:

Climate change and habitat loss are among the largest threats to monarch butterflies. According to the World Wildlife Foundation (WWF), climate change threatens to disrupt the monarch butterfly’s annual migration pattern by affecting weather conditions in both wintering grounds and summer breeding grounds. Colder, wetter winters could be lethal to these creatures and hotter, drier summers could shift suitable habitats north.

Habitat loss is another major threat to the species. Monarchs need mountain forests in Mexico for their winter habitat. However, nearby human communities also rely on these forests for agriculture and tourism activities. In the United States, monarchs need places to reproduce and feed, relying heavily on the plant milkweed. However, herbicide use is decreasing the availability of their primary food source, milkweed.

Monarch Butterfly Fact Sheet | Blog | Nature | PBS (7)

Conservation Status:

As of 2013, the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) listed monarch butterflies of least concern. However, according to the National Wildlife Federation (NWF), the monarch population has declined by approximately 90% since the 1990s.

WWF assesses the population of monarch butterflies that winter in Mexico based on the amount of land that monarchs occupy. Their latest survey indicates a population decrease of 53% since the previous season. In the 2019-2020 wintering season, the area of forest occupied by monarch butterflies was 7 acres, down from 15 acres in the 2018 – 2019 season.

Conservation Efforts:

WWF works to preserve vital butterfly habitat in Mexico’s Monarch Butterfly Reserve by promoting good forest management and sustainable tourism. WWF also supports tree nurseries that help restore the forest in the Reserve which creates new sources of income for the local communities that live among the butterflies.

NWF recommends that the best way to help monarchs is by restoring their natural habitat by planting native milkweeds and nectar plants, eliminating pesticides, and encouraging others to adopt these practices.

Monarch Butterfly Fact Sheet | Blog | Nature | PBS (8)

How You Can Help:

Travel to see Monarchs: WWF, along with Natural Habitat Adventures, offers adventures to the Monarch Butterfly Reserve in Mexico.

Sign up for the Monarch Squad with WWF

Source: WWF, NWF, IUCN

Monarch Butterfly Fact Sheet | Blog | Nature | PBS (2024)

FAQs

How far away can monarchs smell milkweed? ›

I have heard that Monarchs can smell milkweeds from over two miles away. It may be from even further away if the milkweed population is large. Wow, do they have good senses, but their survival depends on them finding milkweeds. Monarchs use receptors on their antennae to “smell” the milkweeds in your landscape.

What are the 3 biggest threats to the monarch butterfly? ›

Across their range, monarchs are threatened by pesticides, climate change, ongoing suburban sprawl, and fragmented and poisoned habitats as they navigate their way across the continent.

Do monarch butterflies change color? ›

The surface of a monarch's wing is covered with thousands of tiny, flat, colorful scales. As the monarch loses these scales, it loses its color.

What are some fun facts about monarch butterflies for kids? ›

Migration: East of the Rockies, Monarchs make a 3,000-mile journey each year, migrating between Canada and Mexico. These Monarchs return each winter to roosts in the hills of Michoacan, Mexico, where they gather by the millions. Many people do not realize that over a million Monarchs also make a western migration.

Can butterflies survive without milkweed? ›

Many butterflies have a single plant required as a food source for their larval form called a host plant. Milkweed is the host plant for the monarch butterfly. Without milkweed, the larva would not be able to develop into a butterfly. Monarchs use a variety of milkweeds.

What milkweed kills monarchs? ›

With sobering news about monarch butterfly (Danaus plexippus) populations, many gardeners are intent on growing more habitat for these interesting creatures. One type of milkweed advertised to support monarchs—called tropical milkweed (Asclepias curassavica)—has a complex and likely negative impact on the butterflies.

Can monarchs live without milkweed? ›

Monarchs cannot survive without milkweed; their caterpillars only eat milkweed plants (Asclepias spp.), and monarch butterflies need milkweed to lay their eggs. With shifting land management practices, we have lost much milkweed from the landscape.

What eats a monarch butterfly? ›

Monarchs have many natural enemies. Predators such as spiders and fire ants kill and eat monarch eggs and caterpillars. Some birds and wasps feed on adult butterflies. These predators are easy to see, but monarchs also suffer attacks from parasites, organisms that live inside the monarchs' bodies.

What is the life span of a monarch butterfly? ›

The male and female also have differently shaped abdomen, and the female's wing veins look slightly wider than the males. How long do monarchs live? Monarch butterflies typically live from 2 to 6 weeks except for the last generation of the year, which can live up to 8 to 9 months.

Are monarch butterflies endangered in 2024? ›

In 2014, monarchs were petitioned to be listed under the federal Endangered Species Act. In December 2020, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service found that listing was warranted but precluded(opens in new tab) by other listing actions on its National Priority List. The monarch is currently slated to be listed in 2024.

How to tell how old a butterfly is? ›

Wing Condition

It is thus possible to get a rough estimate of a monarch's age by looking at how many scales it has lost. To measure wing condition, look carefully at the inside of the butterfly's wings, and assess how bright they look, and whether scales are missing.

Do monarch butterflies fly in the rain? ›

When it's raining, monarchs do not fly. Butterflies in my experimental cages hold onto the sides of the cages until it stops raining. In the wild, they hold onto trees or bushes. If wet monarchs get knocked off these perches, they sometimes get stuck on the ground.

What are the gold dots on a chrysalis? ›

Even though the caterpillar's head disappears, the eye tissue remains to become the butterfly's eyes. The telltale gold spots on the outside of a chrysalis are ports of entry for oxygen. Stringer has since expanded his spying into metamorphosis.

What is a unique fact about butterflies? ›

Did you know that butterflies can see colors that we cannot? This is because they can perceive ultraviolet light, which is outside the scope of our visual capabilities. Additionally, many butterflies' wings include these “unknown” ultraviolet colors to attract mates.

What's special about monarch butterflies? ›

More than beautiful, monarch butterflies contribute to the health of our planet. While feeding on nectar, they pollinate many types of wildflowers.

What makes monarch butterflies so special? ›

Pollinators as a whole are responsible for as many as 1 in 3 bites of food that we eat, and for sustaining our natural plant ecosystems. Monarchs are not the most efficient pollinator species, but they can and do pollinate some plants. Monarchs are considered a flagship species or a poster species for all pollinators.

Do monarch butterflies have babies? ›

A female Monarch butterfly lays from 100 to 300 eggs during her life. The eggs hatch about four days after they are laid. When larvae first hatch they are less than 1 centimeter (cm) and grow to be about 5 cm. The stages between larval molts are called instars.

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Kimberely Baumbach CPA

Last Updated:

Views: 6648

Rating: 4 / 5 (41 voted)

Reviews: 80% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Kimberely Baumbach CPA

Birthday: 1996-01-14

Address: 8381 Boyce Course, Imeldachester, ND 74681

Phone: +3571286597580

Job: Product Banking Analyst

Hobby: Cosplaying, Inline skating, Amateur radio, Baton twirling, Mountaineering, Flying, Archery

Introduction: My name is Kimberely Baumbach CPA, I am a gorgeous, bright, charming, encouraging, zealous, lively, good person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.