The beloved orange-and-black insect is a step closer to extinction due to climate change and habitat destruction, a conservationist group said. Meanwhile, tigers are doing better than expected.
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The International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) has included the migratory monarch butterfly on its Red List of Threatened Species and categorized it as "endangered."
The designation is two steps lower than extinction.
"It's just a devastating decline,'' said Stuart Pimm, an ecologist at Duke University who was not involved in the new listing. "This is one of the most recognizable butterflies in the world."
According to the IUCN, the population of monarch butterflies in North America has declined between 22% and 72% over the last 10 years.
Scientists estimate that the population has shrunk by 85% since the 1990s, when the species was numbering in the millions.
The IUCN, however, did not list nonmigratory monarch butterflies in Central and South America.
The incredible journeys of migratory animals
From the Arctic to the Serengeti, whales, butterflies and other animals on the move make some extraordinary journeys. They mainly travel for food or sex, but some even set off in search of exfoliating skin treatments.
Image: picture-alliance/blickwinkel/McPHOTO/E. u. H. Pum
Pole to pole
It isn't unusual for animals to migrate to avoid harsh winters, but the sun-seeking Arctic tern takes this strategy to extremes. The small seabird flies between the Arctic and Antarctic to take in two summers each year and more daylight hours than any other animal. Making a round trip of 35,000 kilometers (21,748 miles), the tern breaks all records for migratory distances traveled.
Image: picture-alliance/blickwinkel/McPHOTO/E. u. H. Pum
Uphill struggle
If the tern takes prize for distance, the salmon surely deserves special commendation for effort. Hatching in rivers, they swim downstream to spend most of their lives at sea. But the hard work comes as they battle against the current and leap up waterfalls to make it home. If this wasn't struggle enough, hungry bears, eagles and people lie in wait for the exhausted fish as they near their goal.
Image: Imago/ZUMA Press/J. Mather
Midnight wanderers
By day, straw colored fruit bats hang from Africa's city trees like assemblages of broken umbrellas. But at twilight, they take gracefully to the air, traveling up to 180 kilometers before dawn and dispersing seeds and pollen as they feed. They span even greater distances by season, and in colossal numbers. Each fall, around 10 million of these "megabats" arrive in Zambia's Kasanka National Park.
Image: imageBROKER/picture-alliance
Spa break
Many whales hunt in polar regions but can travel 18,000 kilometers each year to enjoy warmer waters. Scientists had assumed they prefer to give birth in the tropics. But new research suggests they might be migrating for the sake of their skin. Whales need to molt, and in icy waters where their blood supply is drawn away from the skin, dead cells build up and put them at risk of infection.
It's hard to imagine a creature as tiny and fragile as a butterfly undertaking epic migratory journeys. And yet, surfing air currents, the monarch butterfly can travel up to 3,000 kilometers. In summer, they're at home in northern regions of the US, but when temperatures fall, they head south to California or Mexico to overwinter. Roosting together in large numbers helps them keep warm all year.
Image: M. Watson/picture-alliance/Mary Evans Picture Library
Third eye
Leatherback turtles travel up to 10,000 kilometers, from Canada to the Caribbean and Alaska to Indonesia. No one knows how they find their way from feeding grounds rich in their favorite foods like jellyfish to the beaches where they breed. But scientists believe a spot on top of the animal's head may allow light to reach its pineal gland, triggering its journey at the right moment of the year.
Image: Imago/Nature Picture Library
Following the herd
The mass movement of wildebeest across the African plains is perhaps the planet's greatest migration spectacle. With no real beginning or end, their circular route takes 1.5 million wildebeest, and a good number of zebras, gazelles and other grazers, through the Serengeti-Mara — crossing crocodile-infested rivers and dodging lions and packs of painted wolves —- in search of fresh food and water.
Image: S. Meyers/picture-alliance/blickwinkel
Slow food
Famous for their parental devotion, emperor penguins lay their eggs a good 100 kilometers from the Antarctic ocean where they feed. Mother and father must take turns to travel across the ice, fill up on fish, and make the long shuffle back to regurgitate it for their young. Their partner, meanwhile, goes hungry for weeks to shield the chick from cold that would otherwise kill it in minutes.
Image: Raimund Linke/picture-alliance/Zoonar
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Why is the migratory monarch butterfly endangered?
Scientists attribute the decline of the migratory monarch butterfly population to several reasons, one being the destruction of substantial areas of their winter shelter due to logging and deforestation.
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Milkweed, the host plant that their larvae feed on, has also been affected by pesticides and herbicides used in intensive agriculture.
Another threat is climate change, with drought, wildfires and extreme temperatures having a significant impact.
Millions of monarch butterflies migrate across the Americas. They spend winter in the mountains of central Mexico or coastal California before they migrate to southern Canada. They breed multiple generations along the way.
"It is difficult to watch monarch butterflies and their extraordinary migration teeter on the edge of collapse, but there are signs of hope," said Anna Walker, who led the assessment of monarchs.
"From planting native milkweed and reducing pesticide use to supporting the protection of overwintering sites and contributing to community science, we all have a role to play in making sure this iconic insect makes a full recovery."
Good news: More tigers
While the migratory monarch butterfly population shrinks, scientists now believe the number of wild tigers is more than previously estimated.
According the IUCN, there are thought to be between 3,726 and 5,578 wild tigers — 40 percent more than at the last assessment in 2015.
The conservationist group said the rise in numbers is largely because of improved monitoring. The tiger population is also believed to be stable or increasing.
Habitat protection projects showed that "recovery is possible," the IUCN said.