Monarch numbers tend to see-saw up and down, as do populations of any species in a biological community or ecosystem. Scientists often refer to the 'boom and bust' of a population.

The boom is when the population grows exponentially rapidly, but is then followed by a bust (when the population falls back to a minimal level). It's rather like a roller coaster. Everything depends on the natural predators and parasites in that particular ecosystem, plus the weather, landscape and natural events.

Did you ever consider that a monarch caterpillar is a predator? They are herbivores... and can rapidly destroy milkweed.

Everything is connected

Where there is plenty of milkweed (e.g. swan plant) the monarch will thrive - but so will the aphids. Other monarch predators and parasites will also thrive so this depletes the monarch population. Take a look at this chart and you can see how everything is connected.

Boom-and-Bust-of-a-Milkweed-Patch

When the MBNZT has done research in the past, because we have heard that there is a dearth of monarchs, we also get many people saying 'but I've raised hundreds' etc. And... it is the people who believe they are seeing LESS monarchs that get in touch as they are concerned. The people who feel they are seeing more monarchs do not, of course, raise an alarm. So it is very hard to judge.

Are they REALLY helping?

The sad thing is that a lot of people are trying to 'help' the monarch population by raising hundreds, even saving diseased monarchs, which of course does not help the monarch at all... it just helps the disease thrive, and weakens the monarch population.

Citizen Science!

This is why the MBNZT is keen to have more of our members (and non-members) participate in MLMP (Monarch Larva Monitoring Project), a citizen science project involving monarch-lovers in NZ. In previous years this project has only been open to volunteers from North America but now New Zealanders can participate and provide useful data for monarch research.

The programme was developed in 1997 by researchers at the University of Minnesota to collect long-term data on larval monarch populations and milkweed habitat. Find out more under the RESEARCH tab on this site.

Personal thoughts...

However, I personally believe that there are fewer butterflies around now than there were 30 or 40 years ago. I am not talking about in my garden but generally, around NZ. Monarchs depend on humans planting and growing milkweed - and humans are concentrated in urban areas. When I was young (I'm now in my 70's) I would see more butterflies in urban areas than I do today.

Male monarchs tend to hang around the milkweed patch (swan plant) as it is where they will find females... laying eggs. Female monarchs can smell milkweed from up to 2km away so when they have laid eggs on one swan plant (and possibly mate with a male or males) they will move on to milkweed nearby and so on, moving around and about the community.

Ten or 20 years ago I would see more on a drive from one side of Auckland to another... or passing through urban areas as I travelled around the country, than I do today.

Another thought is the number of people who comment after I've given a talk to a gardening club or service organisation, that they remember the number of different butterflies (and other insects such as dragonflies) when they were growing up that they don't see today.

We need to do more research! Or rather, we need more citizen scientists! Will you help us?

Tug-on-anything

Vanessa gonerilla red admiral on blue cineraria Jacqui Knight
Red admiral on cineraria

Over the past 4-5 weeks my cinerarias have been delighting me... and the occasional butterfly has stopped by to enjoy them too. Cinerarias are a winter-spring flowering annual, and once they're growing in your garden they will emerge each season with their large, round and very soft leaves.

monarch-on-cineraria-low-1

You can also buy them in the stores - but these have been 'improved' so they don't set seed. Now that the cineraria season is over I won't remove the sad-looking plants to the compost heap just yet.

Each day I'm collecting the seed and while a lot is also being blown around the garden, I'll make sure I scatter some where I would like more plants to grow next season... such as the habitat project in the Blockhouse Bay Recreational Reserve.

cineraria-seedhead-1-low

It's easy to collect the ripe seed although it's so tiny. When it's ready for collection the flower will die and the seed is attached to silky filaments.

cineraria-seedhead-2

I 'pinch' each little fluffy pompom and transfer the contents to a paper envelope. Job done!

I'm not sure if it would be best to scatter this seed now or next year... but I figure Nature does it now so it probably is the best time to do so.

What's your thoughts?

If you grew up in New Zealand then chances are that you will recognise the monarch butterfly. In the 1950’s, when I was at primary school, every classroom had a Nature Table. Each Spring someone would bring in some monarch caterpillars on swan plant.

But here’s a few facts you probably never knew about them!

A few facts about monarchs

Did you know you can tell the difference between a male and a female monarch? It’s not so easy with other species of butterfly, but monarch males have two scent glands which appear like black dots on their hindwings. The veins on female monarchs are also thicker than on the male.

Monarch-male-vs-female-inforgraphic-blog

Monarch butterflies are believed to have introduced themselves to New Zealand in the 19th century, with the earliest written records dating from European settlement. In North America, east of the Rocky Mountains they make a spectacular migration each Autumn (Fall) from as far north as Canada to join millions of monarch butterflies in reserves in the mountains of Mexico’s Transvolcanic Belt. It is the most amazing migration to witness! Some butterflies have flown 5,000 kilometres!

Monarchs (Danaus plexippus), Michoacán, Mexico

A cluster of monarchs in the Sierra Chincua Santuario Mariposa Monarca, Michoacán, Mexico

NZ does not have a large number of butterfly species that they can call their own but we do have about 2,000 moths, of which over 90% are endemic!

All butterfly and moth species need two types of plants: The females of each species lay eggs on ‘host plants’, which vary depending on the butterfly. I think everyone knows that the cabbage white lays eggs on brassicas like your cabbages and cauliflowers. The monarch, of course, lays eggs on swan plants, so called because the seed pods resemble swans before they split open, the wind scattering their seeds.

swan-plant-seed-Sally-Phillips-blog

Did you know that the swan plant originated in Africa? It is believed that quite possibly the seed arrived in NZ as a ‘stowaway’ inside a pillow, cushion or garment which was bought by settlers visiting ports on their journey here. The fibre attached to the seed has been used for many years as a stuffing material.

In fact, during WWII, when America joined the Allies, they needed kapok to fill thousands of Mae Wests (life preservers). As Indonesia was held by the Japanese there was no kapok available. So schools in the United States were called upon to send their students out into the fields to gather milkweed floss and it was actually found to have a better flotation score than kapok. This comic-style poster from 1941 tells the story - thanks to monarchflyway.com for sharing.

Wwii Comic Backyard Lifesaver

Nectar is sweet!

But I digress! The other type of plant that all butterflies need is a nectar source: bright, colourful flowers that are loaded with nectar. Butterflies are pollinators, like bees, so as they extend their proboscis deep into the centre of a flower they collect pollen which they then leave in another flower, allowing fertilisation of the flowers and in the end producing seeds or fruit. It is estimated that ¾ of our food depends on pollination!

Monarchs-on-Echinacea-Sally-Phillips-blog

This first blog post gives you a bit of background into what the MBNZT all about, the conservation of our New Zealand butterflies. Our mission (to engage with New Zealanders to ensure our biodiversity promotes a thriving moth and butterfly population) is so important.

I apologise for the length but hope you have the time to read it!

Way back...

In 1975 – that’s a long time ago – I became concerned about what people (me and others) were doing to their environment. A group called Friends of the Earth put me in touch with the late Jeanette Fitzsimons (who went on to become the co-leader of the Green Party). She was an inspiration to me as I searched for more environmentally-friendly ways of living my life and raising my family.

FROTH2-blog

Our mission... to engage with New Zealanders to ensure our biodiversity promotes a thriving moth and butterfly population

When I became a mother i did what my mother had done with me, spending time outdoors with my sons, letting their curiosity open their minds to Nature. We had fun finding out the answers to their questions, learning together. Visits to the library and phone calls to experts were the norm – we didn't have the advantage of the internet at our fingertips.

Why butterflies?

Butterflies were always a key focus as with the monarch we could watch the whole process of metamorphosis and learn about the relationship between flora and fauna, the interdependence of biodiversity. I began to understand that Earth’s ecosystems had evolved for millions of years, resulting in diverse and complex biological communities, all living in balance with the environment – the web of life. But today human activity has impacted Nature in every part of the world. Wild animals and plants are at risk of extinction. Deforestation and land degradation are causing lack of drinkable water and erosion. And climate change! The pollution from plastic! It’s tragic.

Monarch-on-Tithonia-Jacqui-Knight-landscape-blog
Female monarch on Tithonia diversifolia

Back then, other parents began to ask me to visit their schools and kindergartens and teach about monarch butterflies. I began to realise there was so much I didn’t know… but the monarch is a wonderful teacher. With my family we visited Butterfly Bay which we’d been told was a prime overwintering site for the monarch butterfly in New Zealand. That was the early 1980’s.

Butterfly-Bay-Report
Butterfly Bay, 1980s

Not so long agao...

25 years later I was living in Northland and I heard that Butterfly Bay was about to be developed. I didn’t want to see this ecosystem destroyed and thought it would be a good idea to liaise with the developer and ensure that they understood the significance of this beautiful corner of Aotearoa New Zealand. I asked three friends if they would help me form the Monarch Butterfly New Zealand Trust with the aim of protecting the monarch butterfly. In the end the development never went ahead but the MBNZT grew from strength to strength and morphed into the Moths and Butterflies of NZ Trust.

Meanwhile I was learning so much about our own beautiful butterfly and moth species. Did you know that NZ has about 2,000 species of moth – possibly more – and more than 90% of them are only found in this country (endemic)! We are short on butterfly species but what we do have are pretty amazing too.

Aotearoa New Zealand has over 2,000 species
of moth and over 90% of them are endemic.

Te Ara - the Encyclopedia of New Zealand

Surprise, surprise!

What surprised me was how little people knew about our 'other' butterfly species. I had a sneaking suspicion about this so I stood outside a garden centre one day to do my own research… "What butterfly species did they know about in NZ?"

The answers: 'the monarch' (or sometimes it was the 'big orange one') and then 'that small white one which is a pest'. That was all. Very few people today knew about our other species.

More and more concerned about what's happening to our environment, this week I have been encouraged by a documentary series just released on the Stuff website titled This is How it Ends.

This-is-how-it-ends-Stuff-blog

If you are still unconvinced about the fragility of our environment I encourage you to watch these
episodes about NZ’s unique biodiversity and how it is under threat. (Just click on the image above).

“We are at crisis point. Unfortunately, the way we feed and fuel our 21st Century lifestyle is unsustainable. We have fundamentally changed the planet. And it’s completely getting out of balance.” 

Livia Esterhazy, WWF-NZ

Getting out of balance? No! Things are already WAY out of balance.

You don't know what you've got until it's gone...

But how can we appreciate something we don’t know exists? How can we PROTECT a species if we don’t know it exists?

Four-NZ-butterflies-blog
Here are four endemic New Zealand butterflies, clockwise from top left, the forest ringlet
(photo thanks Norm Twigge), Kahukura or red admiral (Chris Rickards), the glade copper
and lastly the common copper (Martin Gascoigne-Pees). How many did you recognise?

So much needs to be done for our butterflies and moths. (Of course, there’s so much that needs to be done for our environment… but we can only do so much.)

Help us help them, please!

If you’re a butterfly lover, here’s a good place to start. The vision of the MBNZT is to ensure that Aotearoa New Zealand’s ecosystems support thriving moth and butterfly populations. Please join us if you can. Financial members help us by funding our projects (and they receive our magazine four times a year.) If you can’t afford to become a financial supporter sign up for our free e-news to receive tips that will help you make your own garden more butterfly-friendly. Other ways you can help us are to follow our blog and other social media channels.

We know you’ll enjoy the journey and be able to implement small steps in your lives which will change the future of Aotearoa New Zealand.

And I want to thank you for reading this far. I warned you it was a long one, didn’t I?

Future posts will be much shorter, I promise!

Jacqui Knight, Founding Trustee

 

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Thanks to our heroes we are making steady progress towards our vision, that Aotearoa New Zealand's ecosystems support thriving moth and butterfly populations.
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