Group calls on Canadians to help gather data on monarch butterfly - Action News
Home WebMail Saturday, November 23, 2024, 12:26 AM | Calgary | -11.5°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Montreal

Group calls on Canadians to help gather data on monarch butterfly

A group of researchers across Canada are calling on everyday citizens to take part in a "science blitz" over the weekend to help protect the monarch butterfly.

Mission Monarch aims to get Canadians involved in protecting monarch butterflies

The population of monarch butterflies in the east has gone from a billion in 1997 to about 33 million in 2013. (Matthew Beck/The Citris County Chronicle/Associated Press)

A group of researchers across Canada are calling on everyday citizens to take part in a "science blitz"over the weekend to help protect the monarch butterfly.

Mission Monarch aims to teach Canadians about the plight of the monarch while saving their breeding habitats at the same time.

The saviour in this story isan unassuming, not very well-liked plant: the milkweed.

"It's known as a host plant; that means it's the only plant on which females can lay their eggs," DaphnLaurier-Montpetit, a biologist and a coordinator of the project, toldCBC'sAll in a Weekend.

"The caterpillar needs to feed from this plant to be able to grow."

On the hunt for milkweed

The problem is many people don't like the plant and destroy it.

That's why Mission Monarch is asking Canadians to find milkweed sites in their area and look for monarch eggs or caterpillars.

Monarch butterflies only lay their eggs on milkweed, making the plant crucial to the insect's survival. (M. Spencer Green/Associated Press)

All the information inputted to their website will help scientistsbuilda database of where the butterflies are laying their eggs.

"We want to know what's going on. Even if you don't find anything on a milkweed plant, we want to know," said Laurier-Montpetit.

The blitz doesn't need to end this weekend, Laurier-Montpetit said. Thehope is information will keep pouring in that will help save the monarch population.

A monarch butterfly lands on a young girl's nose. (Tyson Koschik/CBC)