More Monarch Butterfly Habitat Created in Wisconsin
Sunday, August 22nd, 2021 -- 9:01 AM
Wisconsin monarchs looking for milkweed to lay their eggs on will now find hundreds of thousands of more acres of habitat in Wisconsin thanks to voluntary efforts by organizations and individuals statewide, including representatives from the Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources.
The Wisconsin Monarch Collaborative formed in 2018 to voluntarily plant milkweed and wildflowers on a massive scale. The collaborative’s efforts are essential to help reverse an 80% decline over the last 20 years in the Eastern population of monarchs that breed and migrate through Wisconsin and 15 other states.
Participants in the Wisconsin Monarch Collaborative include DNR representatives and other state and federal agencies, utilities, transportation groups, agriculture groups, university researchers, conservation groups and nature centers.
The group advises that adding and maintaining habitat is an important factor in reversing monarchs’ decline. The group encourages planting and maintaining native milkweed and native wildflowers.
Milkweeds are the only source of food monarch caterpillars will eat and adult monarchs feed on a wide variety of native wildflowers. Collaborative members committed to voluntarily adding 120 million new stems of milkweed, along with other native wildflowers, as Wisconsin’s contribution to a larger regional strategy.
The group’s “Key Accomplishments 2018-2020” report released earlier this year shows monarch habitat taking flight in Wisconsin, reflecting these accomplishments including:
105,000 reported new or enhanced acres of habitat, the bulk of it on DNR State Natural Areas;
205,268 acres enrolled in the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Conservation Reserve Program;
822 monarch specific conservation projects assisted by Pheasants Forever Farm Bill Biologists;
Six major demonstration sites to teach and inspire, including at two rest areas along Interstate 39/90/94 west of Madison;
85,000 copies of Wisconsin plant list for monarchs sent directly to Wisconsin homes;
And 184 Wisconsin organizations and individuals have taken the pledge to help monarchs
Andrew Wallendal, co-leader of the collaborative’s agricultural working group, said many farmers are growing much-needed products and providing ecosystem services of pollinator habitats.
Dan Meyer, a Wisconsin Farm Bureau member and dairy farmer from Kiel planning his first monarch habitat, said that pollinator habitats can be a win-win for the environment and a farmer’s pocketbook.
The Wisconsin Monarch Collaborative’s website contains Wisconsin-specific information on how to create habitat on farms, rights-of-ways, urban areas and protected lands. The public can also report monarch habitat they have created in recent years to count toward Wisconsin’s tally.
Feel free to contact us with questions and/or comments.