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Journal ArticleDOI

Changes in climate drive recent monarch butterfly dynamics.

TLDR
In this article, the authors use a hierarchical modeling approach, combining data from >18,000 systematic surveys to evaluate support for each of these hypotheses over a 25-yr period.
Abstract
Declines in the abundance and diversity of insects pose a substantial threat to terrestrial ecosystems worldwide. Yet, identifying the causes of these declines has proved difficult, even for well-studied species like monarch butterflies, whose eastern North American population has decreased markedly over the last three decades. Three hypotheses have been proposed to explain the changes observed in the eastern monarch population: loss of milkweed host plants from increased herbicide use, mortality during autumn migration and/or early-winter resettlement and changes in breeding-season climate. Here, we use a hierarchical modelling approach, combining data from >18,000 systematic surveys to evaluate support for each of these hypotheses over a 25-yr period. Between 2004 and 2018, breeding-season weather was nearly seven times more important than other factors in explaining variation in summer population size, which was positively associated with the size of the subsequent overwintering population. Although data limitations prevent definitive evaluation of the factors governing population size between 1994 and 2003 (the period of the steepest monarch decline coinciding with a widespread increase in herbicide use), breeding-season weather was similarly identified as an important driver of monarch population size. If observed changes in spring and summer climate continue, portions of the current breeding range may become inhospitable for monarchs. Our results highlight the increasingly important contribution of a changing climate to insect declines.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Opposing global change drivers counterbalance trends in breeding North American monarch butterflies

TL;DR: In this paper , the authors examine spatiotemporal patterns and potential drivers of adult monarch relative abundance trends across the entire breeding range in eastern and western North America, finding that population growth in summer is compensating for losses during the winter and that changing environmental variables have offsetting effects on mortality and reproduction.
Journal ArticleDOI

Grappling with uncertainty in ecological projections: a case study using the migratory monarch butterfly

TL;DR: In this paper , the authors compared the performance of a maximum number of models against trimming ensembles based on model validation and found that the best-performing models provided more useful information, projecting higher spring temperatures for developing monarch larvae.
Journal ArticleDOI

Milkweed plants bought at nurseries may expose monarch caterpillars to harmful pesticide residues

TL;DR: In this paper , the authors collected leaf samples from 235 milkweed plants purchased at 33 retail nurseries across the US to screen for pesticides and found that 61 different pesticides with an average of 12.2 (± 5.0) compounds per plant.
Journal ArticleDOI

Distribution and phenology of monarch butterfly larvae and their milkweed hosts in the South Central US

TL;DR: In this paper , the authors address multiple gaps in assessment of monarch conservation priorities for the South Central US through analyses of monarch larval host selectivity, phenology and spatial density, as well as the phenology, niche modeled distribution, and land cover selectivity of important milkweed hosts.
Journal ArticleDOI

Host plant limitation of butterflies in highly fragmented landscapes

TL;DR: In this article , the authors explore both density-dependent and search-independent search-time limitation for monarch butterfly population dynamics and find that search time limitation leads to changes in population growth rate that can cause herbivore numbers to decline when host plant densities are constant.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Defaunation in the Anthropocene

TL;DR: Defaunation is both a pervasive component of the planet’s sixth mass extinction and also a major driver of global ecological change.
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