Experts say decline to coverage
of only 7.19 acres of forest could be due to late winter storms last year that
knocked down more than 100 acres of trees
Associated Press in Mexico City
Thursday 9 February 2017
18.16 GMT Last modified on Thursday 9 February 2017 19.25 GMT
The number of monarch butterflies
wintering in Mexico dropped
by 27% this year, reversing last year’s recovery from historically low numbers,
according to a study by government and independent experts released Thursday.
The experts say the decline could
be due to late winter storms last year that blew down
more than 100 acres (40 hectares) of forests where migrating monarch
butterflies spend the winter in central Mexico.
Millions of monarchs make the
3,400-mile (5,500km) migration from the US and Canada each year, and they
cluster tightly in the pine and fir forests west of Mexico City. They are
counted not by individuals, but by the area they cover.
“The reduction in the area of
forest they occupied this year is most probably due to the high mortality
caused by storms and cold weather last year,” said Omar Vidal, the head of the
Mexico office of the World Wildlife Fund.
“It is a clear reminder for the three countries that they must step up actions
to protect breeding, feeding and migratory habitat.”
Officials estimate the storms in
March killed about 6.2m butterflies, almost 7.4% of the estimated 84m that
wintered in Mexico, said Alejandro Del Mazo, Mexico’s commissioner for
protected areas. The monarchs were preparing to fly back to the US and Canada
at the time the storm hit.
While no butterfly lives to make
the round trip, a reduction in the number making it out of the wintering
grounds often results in a decline among those who return the next year.
The combination of rain, cold and
high winds from the storms caused the loss of 133 acres (54 hectares) of pine
and fir trees in the mountaintop wintering grounds, more than four times the
amount lost to illegal logging. It was the biggest storm-related loss since the
winter of 2009-10, when unusually heavy rainstorms and mudslides caused the
destruction of 262 acres (106 hectares) of trees.
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