Resilience or Catastrophe? A possible state change for monarch
butterflies in the West
Abstract
In the western United States, the population of migratory monarch
butterflies is on the brink of collapse, having dropped from several
million butterflies at coastal overwintering sites in the 1980’s to
about 2000 butterflies in the winter of 2020-21. At the same time, a
resident (non-migratory) monarch butterfly population in urban gardens
seems to be expanding northward. If anything, this urban population has
been growing in recent years. We explore the meaning of these changes.
The new resident population is not sufficient to make up for the loss of
the migratory population; there are still orders of magnitude fewer
butterflies now than in the recent past. The resident population also
probably lacks the demographic capacity to expand its range inland
during summer months, due to higher levels of infection by a protozoan
parasite, and subsequently lower survival and fecundity. Nonetheless,
the resident population may have the capacity to persist. This sudden
change emphasizes the extent to which environmental change can have
unexpected consequences. It also demonstrates how quickly these changes
can happen. We hope it will provoke discussion about how we define
resilience and viability in changing environments.