Cold snaps trigger Monarch butterfly migrations

Monarch Watch

Migrant monarch butterflies are captured in midair as they travel south.

By Elizabeth Howell
LiveScience

Cold weather in the Mexico mountaintops, where monarchs spend the winter, triggers the butterflies' migration northward, according to new research.

The finding raises troubling implications, researchers said, for how the approximately half-billion migratory butterflies will find their way if climate change unduly warms the mountains.

Monarch Watch

Migrant monarch butterflies tanking up on nectar as they migrate south.

"What we're most struck by is that this is an area of vulnerability for the butterflies," said Steven Reppert, a butterfly migration specialist with the University of Massachusetts Medical School. Reppert co-authored a paper on the research, which will appear in the March 4 edition of the journal Current Biology.

Simulating migration
Two large populations of monarchs live in the United States — one on the West Coast, and the other in eastern North America.

Reppert and lead author Patrick Guerra zeroed in on the eastern butterflies to see how they make the 2,000-mile (3,200-kilometer) journey south to a small overwintering site in central Mexico. The researchers determined that the butterflies navigate by the sun, compensating for the time of day as they go. [Images: Monarchs' Butterfly Forest in Central Mexico]

To track the monarchs' flight, Guerra and Reppert put most of the butterflies in a flight simulator. The team placed the enclosure, a plastic barrel, outdoors and suspended the butterflies inside on a short wire above a fan. The butterflies' flight is recorded on video and with a directional recording device.

The scientists ran one experiment during the fall, when migrants usually head south. For 24 days, the researchers kept the butterflies in a controlled environment that mimicked cold temperatures experienced in the Mexico mountains in the spring. Then, the researchers put the butterflies inside the simulator to see what they would do.

Current Biology, Guerra et al.

A migrant monarch butterfly returning north often looks a bit worse for wear after the long journey south.

"Instead of going south, they went north. We said, 'Wow,'" Reppert told OurAmazingPlanet.

North and south
After performing experiments to discount the effects of light and other factors, the researchers captured older migrant monarch butterflies in the southern United States as a last control. The scientists kept the monarchs in a controlled environment for four months.

During the early spring, these butterflies are usually in the midst of a northward migration, having experienced cold temperatures in Mexico. That's not what these migrants did, however, after they were exposed to the cold in the controlled environment. The butterflies flew south in the simulator instead of north.

This means that cold is the major impetus for monarchs to choose their direction of migration in the spring and fall, Reppert said.

"We think it’s a pretty compelling story in terms of the importance of this cold temperature for this change in migratory patterns," Reppert said.

Follow Elizabeth Howell @howellspace, or OurAmazingPlanet on Twitter @OAPlanet. We're also on Facebook and Google+.

Copyright 2013 LiveScience, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Discuss this post

The study only demonstrated the direction the cold treated butterflies would fly when tethered on a crude flight simulator. So the study didn't actually demonstrate the direction they would fly if they were free living in the wild.

I find it appalling that from such a crude experiment the authors find it appropriate to make alarmist comments like: "Without this thermal stimulus, the annual migration cycle would be broken, and we could have lost one of the most intriguing biological phenomena in the world."

    Reply#1 - Thu Feb 21, 2013 9:29 PM EST

    The finding raises troubling implications, researchers said, for how the approximately half-billion migratory butterflies will find their way if climate change unduly warms the mountains.

    This experiment does nothing of the sort.

    They took butterflies and subjected them to cold weather (not warm weather).

    The scientists ran one experiment during the fall, when migrants usually head south. For 24 days, the researchers kept the butterflies in a controlled environment that mimicked cold temperatures experienced in the Mexico mountains in the spring. Then, the researchers put the butterflies inside the simulator to see what they would do.

    "Instead of going south, they went north. We said, 'Wow,'" Reppert told OurAmazingPlanet.

    After performing experiments to discount the effects of light and other factors, the researchers captured older migrant monarch butterflies in the southern United States as a last control. The scientists kept the monarchs in a controlled environment for four months.

    During the early spring, these butterflies are usually in the midst of a northward migration, having experienced cold temperatures in Mexico. That's not what these migrants did, however, after they were exposed to the cold in the controlled environment. The butterflies flew south in the simulator instead of north.

    You can't make the claim that a possible small amount of warming might make butterflies travel the wrong direction based on this type of experiment. That's not how science works. You would have to subject them to warm temperatures (something they never did) and then see which way they travel.

    They are making assumptions regarding heat based on experiments involving cold.

    Very shoddy science. Any grade school science teacher would know better than that.

      Reply#2 - Fri Feb 22, 2013 11:14 AM EST
      You're in Easy Mode. If you prefer, you can use XHTML Mode instead.
      As a new user, you may notice a few temporary content restrictions. Click here for more info.