By Lincoln P. Brower and Homero Aridjis, The New York Times, March 15, 2013
In the Village of Contepec, in Michoacán, a few
hours northwest of Mexico City, every winter day, rivers of orange and black
butterflies would stream through the streets in search of water, swooping down
from the Oyamel fir forest on Altamirano Hill. One of us, Homero, grew up with
the monarch butterflies. The other, Lincoln, saw them for the first time in
1977, also in Michoacán, on a mountain called Sierra Chincua, where the
branches of hundreds of fir trees were covered with butterflies that exploded
into glorious flight when warmed by the sun.
Today the winter monarch colonies, which are found west of Mexico
City, in an area of about 60 miles by 60 miles, are a pitiful remnant of their
former splendor. The aggregate area covered by the colonies dwindled from an
average of 22 acres between 1994 and 2003 to 12 acres between 2003 and 2012.
This year’s area, which was reported on Wednesday, hit a record low of 2.9
acres.
Reasons for the decline are multiple, including: out-of-control
ecotourism, extreme weather and diversion of water. Two threats loom above all
others: the destruction of breeding habitat in the United States because of the
widespread use of powerful herbicides and genetically engineered crops, and
illegal logging in Mexico’s high-elevation Oyamel fir forests.
Deforestation has always been a dark shadow lurking in these beautiful
mountains, and it has never been adequately dealt with by the Mexican
government. In the 1980s, horrified television viewers watched footage of
loggers armed with chain saws felling trees covered with butterflies and
log-laden trucks crushing butterflies as they drove down the mountains. That
led to the establishment, in 1986, of the Monarch
Butterfly Special Biosphere Reserve, within which logging was
outlawed. But still it continued.
In recent years, news releases from Mexico based on aerial imagery
have claimed that illegal logging inside the reserve has been reduced to
virtually zero. But these reports are incomplete and misleading, as they
measure only visible deforestation in the core zone of the reserve, about a
fourth of the protected 217-square-mile area. Forest loss in the surrounding
areas is not reported, nor is the magnitude of local logging, in which
individual trees are removed from the core area. This “selective cutting” is
not visible in the aerial imagery, and yet it alters the forest microclimate
and increases monarch butterflies’ risks of starving and freezing.
Ecotourism is presenting an additional threat to the butterflies as
its popularity increases. As regular visitors to the monarch colonies, we have
seen the conditions in these areas deteriorate, for butterflies and tourists.
Along the heavily used trails that lead to the colonies in Piedra Herrada and
Sierra Chincua, extensive areas of vegetation have been killed. Excessive dust,
which now rises into the air with each step, is hazardous to the butterflies
because it clogs their respiratory orifices. When we visited the Piedra Herrada
site this February, along with former President Jimmy Carter, a welcome sign on
the trail leading to the butterflies read, “No more than 20 people in the
Sanctuary.” And yet we counted 24 tourist buses in the parking lot.
So what can be done? Ecotourism is an important part of the local
economy, but we must make sure that its costs in habitat degradation and
increased butterfly mortality don’t kill the goose that lays the golden egg.
The Mexican government has made strides in reducing much — but not all —
illegal logging, and needs to do more. The United States, for its part, should
re-examine the extent to which industrialized herbicide-based agriculture is
destroying the flora in the Midwestern United States that monarchs depend on in
the spring and summer. In addition to all of this, we simply need better data
on the butterflies.
Measuring the size, location and survival rate of each colony that
winters in Mexico is the responsibility of World Wildlife Fund Mexico and the staff of
the Monarch Butterfly Biosphere Reserve. Sites are measured in December, and
the total areas in each of the major locations are reported, usually in February
or March. But, although W.W.F. Mexico has more specific data, the published
reports are not detailed enough to allow scientists to review the status of
individual colonies or to evaluate the butterflies’ survival in relation to
forest condition. W.W.F. Mexico must release data on where the butterflies
roost each year, whether each colony is increasing or decreasing in size, and
what the mortality rates are at each site.
If some are doing better than others, we must learn why. If, as we
fear, all are diminishing, then we should ask why the current management plans,
both in Mexico and in the United States, are failing.
We are fortunate to have experienced the magnificent overwintering
phenomenon over more than three decades. We hope that better stewardship will
allow the monarch butterflies to continue to festoon the Oyamel forests of
Mexico for generations to come.
Lincoln P. Brower is a professor of zoology
at the University of Florida and a professor of biology at Sweet Briar College.
Homero
Aridjis, a former Mexican ambassador, is the author of the poetry
collection “A Time of Angels.”
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