This year’s count of 4.42 acres of occupied forest habitat is nearly twice as large as last year's, but eastern monarch ...
Monarch butterflies only flap their wings around 5 to 12 times per second — much more slowly than the average butterfly, who flaps about 20 times a second. In the right conditions, a migrating monarch ...
The population wintering in central Mexico's forests occupied 4.42 acres, up from 2.22 acres during the previous winter.
A Pennsylvania butterfly farmer says listing the monarch as a threatened species could do more harm than good.
A monarch butterfly gliding over a field on outstretched ... female landing and reaching her abdomen down to deposit a single golden, cone-shaped egg on the underside of a leaf.
In December, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service proposed to list the monarch butterfly as a threatened species under the U.S. Endangered Species Act. The public can comment on the listing until ...
The survey began in 1997 Monarch butterflies, known for their distinctive orange-and-black wings, are found across North America. Monarchs in the eastern United States spend their winters in ...