Monarchs And Milkweeds

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Pages: 4

This paper explores various articles from which the researchers obtained information about the correlation between monarchs and milkweeds. Monarchs and milkweeds have been in decline for the past few years, we will be discussing the why and the how this all occurred. There are various aspects that contribute to the butterfly's decline, we will be discussing the ones that make the biggest impacts. This article will also analyze the milkweeds from the outdoors experience lab at Arizona Western College in Yuma, Arizona. The researchers will do weekly evaluations of the progress or non-progress of these plants. We will inform if we see them bloom, if we see monarch larvae or anything else we observe. The researchers will observe those milkweeds …show more content…
H. 2015). They have a correlation because they both compliment and benefit each other.Monarch’s migrate to overwintering sites in central California and central Mexico and are well known as one of the unique and spectacular biological phenomena in North America. Continued loss and degradation of habitat in breeding, migratory, and overwintering sites pose negative risks to monarch populations (Luna, T., & Dumroese, R. K. 2013). Milkweed populations have declined because of habitat loss due to urban development. Some of the reasons these species have survived thus far is the protection, conservation and restoration of habitats supporting milkweed(Luna, T., & Dumroese, R. K. 2013). Climate change also plays a role in the decline of milkweed habitats and monarchs because as temperatures continue to rise, milkweeds and monarchs begin to …show more content…
David Wolfe, is the Environmental Defence Fund director of Conservation Strategies, he found that the monarch’s population has declined about 95 percent over the past 20 years. This reaction is due to warmer temperatures failing to trigger the monarch’s instincts to migrate south. Wolfe claims, “In recent years, the monarch’s fall south migration from Canada had been delayed by as much as six weeks.” With delayed migration monarch’s are exposed to extreme weather, which can be lethal. Milkweeds role with climate change is warmer temperatures cause longer droughts, when milkweeds experience both, more milkweed habitats begin to diminish and without milkweeds monarchs could not sustain life (Wolfe, D. 2016,