Migration Update: October 1, 2009
Please Report
Your Sightings!

This Week's News:

Photo of the Week
How do they know which way to go?
The Migration: Maps and Questions

Monarch
Fall Roosts

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PEAK
Migration Events

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ALL Monarch
Migration Sightings

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Distribution Map

Learn About Migration Maps

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Make Your Own Migration Map


For Your Journal
This Week's Map Questions

Latest News

Crossing the Great Plains and Funneling Toward Texas
The geography of our continent is clearly steering the migration now. Butterflies from east to west must cross the southern Great Plains as they head toward their entry point to Mexico. Texas is the gateway state. Look at a map and see its central importance. After months of severe drought there, recent rains arrived just in time to prepare the vegetation for the hungry, thirsty travelers.

Here are some of this week's highlights:

  • In Oklahoma on Wednesday, "Monarchs were passing by at the rate of about 15 - 20 per minute" and sunflower patches were loaded with nectaring butterflies.
  • In Arkansas on Thursday, "My 6th grade class at St. Paul Elementary watched for 30 minutes and counted 62 monarchs traveling south, southwest. This is the most monarchs my class has seen during the past five years."
  • In Kansas, Eisenhower Elementary students are on the lookout. "Today we saw a monarch flying south. It was so cool. We yelled, 'Monarch!' Then everyone saw it!"
  • In Texas, 24 people reported overnight roosts in a single week! All were dazzled by the spectacle as was this observer on Thursday, "I walked toward the trees around 7:00 p.m., completely unaware of the monarchs' presence, when the trees exploded with color!"

What's Happening Across the Continent?
Millions of monarchs are migrating across the Great Plains right now toward Mexico, but that's not all. This week, take a visual tour of a map of North America to see what else observers are reporting. Read comments from the map of "All Migration Sightings." From the far reaches of New Brunswick, to the shores of the Great Lakes, the coast of California, the ciengas of Arizona, and Mexico's Sierra Madres, people are observing monarchs in widely varied landscapes and habitats. These observations raise fascinating questions, inspire people with wonder, and challenge scientists to explain the complicated life history of our familiar backyard butterfly.

Biggest Yet!
A roost of over 30,000 monarchs was discovered in west Texas on September 24th.
Sunflowers bloom in September and attract hungry monarchs.

Slideshow: Which Way to Mexico? Exploring the Mysteries of Monarch Navigation

"The means by which monarchs navigate has mystified monarch researchers for over half a century and it remains one of the most intriguing questions of monarch biology," says monarch scientist Dr. Bill Calvert.

Every fall, we watch monarchs migrate down the map toward their winter home in Mexico. How do they know which way to go? How do they know when they get there? Scientists say monarchs orient with help from the sun and a special biological clock. They use what's called their "time-compensated Sun compass."

Travel with a monarch for a day in this slideshow. See why monarchs can't simply follow the sun. Find out how scientists study the mysterious world of monarch navigation.

Which Way to Mexico?

Links: Monarch Resources to Explore

Monarch Butterfly Migration Updates Will be Posted on THURSDAYS: Aug. 27, Sep. 3, 10, 17, 24, Oct. 1, 8, 15, 22, 29, Nov. 5...or until the monarchs reach Mexico!

The Next Monarch Migration Update Will Be Posted on October 8, 2009.