Monarch Butterfly Now Officially Endangered

The International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN)
Red List of Threatened Species numbers 147,517 species, including 41,459 that
are threatened with extinction. The latest update adds the migratory monarch
butterfly, a sub species of the
monarch butterfly (Danaus plexippus).
In the past decade, the native population has shrunk by between
22 percent and 72 percent during winter migrations from Mexico and California
to summer breeding grounds throughout the U.S. and Canada due to logging and
deforestation for agriculture and urban development. Pesticides and herbicides
kill butterflies and milkweed, the host plant that the larvae of the monarch butterfly
feed on. Drought related to climate change limits the growth of milk[1]weed and increases
the frequency of catastrophic wildfires, and temperature extremes trigger
earlier migrations before milkweed is available, while severe weather has
killed millions of butterflies.
Possible remedies are planting native milkweed, reducing
pesticide and protecting the overwintering sites. IUCN Director General Dr.
Bruno Oberle says, “To preserve the rich diversity of nature, we need
effective, fairly governed, protected and conserved areas alongside decisive
action to tackle climate change and restore ecosystems. In turn, conserving
biodiversity supports communities by providing essential services such as food,
water and sustainable jobs.”