Technology Industry
Industry: Email Alert RSS FeedModel predicts too-wet winter refuges - Will Climate Change Depose Monarchs?
Science News, Nov 15, 2003 by S. Milius
A computer analysis suggests that climate change could ruin the current Mexican overwintering sites for monarch butterflies and perhaps wipe out the insect's populations in eastern North America.
While monarchs that summer in the western United States and Canada gather each autumn by the tens of thousands at spots along the California coast, east of the Rocky Mountains, monarchs head toward Mexico. Some 200 million of these butterflies flee cold weather to bask on about a dozen tree-covered mountain slopes in Mexico, explains Karen Oberhauser of the University of Minnesota at Minneapolis St. Paul.
Most RecentTechnology Articles
A technique called ecological-niche modeling suggests that these sites will grow dangerously moist, increasing the chances of monarch-killing ice and snow, she and A. Townsend Peterson of the University of Kansas in Lawrence predict. The change could take place by 2050, the researchers say in an upcoming Proceedings of the National Academic of Sciences.
The butterflies might change their winter destination, but will refuges with the required characteristics become available? "I think it's really concerning," says Oberhauser.
The new analysis is valuable because people might otherwise dismiss the impact of climate change on monarch butterflies and other long-distance travelers, says Chris Thomas of the University of Leeds in England, who also models climate effects on animals. "Because migrant species are so mobile, one might assume that they will be capable of responding to climate change immediately and easily, simply shifting their distributions into new areas," he says.
Monarchs need a winter site that doesn't freeze or get too warm. Migrating butterflies have immature reproductive systems. "They're like 11-year-old kids," Oberhauser says. High temperatures might prematurely kick the monarchs' development into gear while they're still overwintering. Without the milkweed abundant farther north, they would miss their opportunity to reproduce.
Oberhauser and Peterson found climate data for Mexican areas that do and don't support overwintering monarchs. The scientists fed some of the data into an ecological model that formulated the best rules for where the monarchs winter. When tested on the rest of the real-world data, the rules worked well.
"This is the first time anyone has used niche modeling to look at the seasonal dynamics of a migratory species," says Oberhauser.
The most important factors for the butterfly refuges turned out to be mean minimum January temperature and mean January precipitation.
Next, the researchers consulted detailed climate predictions from the Hadley Center in Exeter, England. Under both a conservative and a more dramatic scenario, the rules predict that the temperatures at the sites will fall within the butterflies' tolerance. However, in both conditions, precipitation will more than triple by 2050, moving far beyond the amount that overwintering monarchs are known to survive.
Because monarchs have four or five generations per year, people can't just move the monarchs to new winter locations and expect them to return. It's their great-great-grand-children that will migrate south next year.
The species does have some flexibility, Oberhauser points out, since it's already expanded its range from North America to other continents.
CXO UnpluggedSmart Business interviews on BNET
Brought to you by CBS MoneyWatch.com
- Best- and Worst-Paid College Degrees
- 6 Things You Should Never Do on Twitter or Facebook
- How Much Sleep Do You Really Need?
- 6 Big Myths about Gas Mileage
Most Recent Reference Articles
- ARAB EUROPEAN RELATIONS - Dec 22 - Russia Denies Selling Missile System To Iran
- EGYPT - Dec 29 - Opposition Says Mubarak Blessed Israeli Attacks
- ARAB AFFAIRS - Dec 22 - Syria Will Eventually Move To Direct Talks With Israel
- ARAB AFFAIRS - Dec 30 - GCC Denounces Massacre
- ARAB ISRAELI RELATIONS - Israel Issues An Appeal To Palestinians In Gaza
Most Recent Reference Publications
Most Popular Reference Articles
- The Greek chorus, Jimmy the Greek got it wrong but so did his critics - Jimmy Snyder and his views on pro sports and race
- How Tyler Perry rose from homelessness to a $5 million mansion
- 9 questions to ask your new lover: what you were afraid to ask, but always wanted to know
- Credit card debt on college campuses: causes, consequences, and solutions
- Living by the word: light the candles





