Abstract

Steep declines in North American monarch butterfly (Danaus plexippus) populations have prompted continent-wide conservation efforts. While monarch monitoring efforts have existed for years, we lack a comprehensive approach to monitoring population vital rates integrated with habitat quality to inform adaptive management and effective conservation strategies. Building a geographically and ecologically representative dataset of monarchs and their habitat will improve these efforts. These data will help track long-term changes in the distribution and abundance of monarchs and their habitats, refine population and habitat models, and illuminate how conservation activities affect monarchs and their habitats. The Monarch Conservation Science Partnership developed the Integrated Monarch Monitoring Program (IMMP) to profile breeding habitats and their use by monarchs in North America. A spatially balanced random sampling framework guides site selection, while also allowing opportunistic inclusion of sites chosen by participants, such as conservation areas. The IMMP weaves new protocols together with those from existing monitoring programs to improve data compatibility for assessing milkweed (Asclepias spp.) density, nectar resources, monarch reproduction and survival, and adult monarch habitat use. Participants may select a protocol subset according to interests or local monitoring objectives, thereby maximizing contributions. Conservation partners, including public and private land managers, academic researchers, and citizen scientists contribute data to a national dataset available for analyses at multiple scales. We describe the program and its development, implementation elements that make the program robust and feasible, participation to date, and how IMMP data can advance research and conservation for monarchs, pollinators, and their habitats.

Highlights

  • Reviewed by: Adam Korösi, MTA-ELTE-MTM Ecology Research Group, Hungary Arthur M

  • We describe the program and its development, implementation elements that make the program robust and feasible, participation to date, and how Integrated Monarch Monitoring Program (IMMP) data can advance research and conservation for monarchs, pollinators, and their habitats

  • East of the Rocky Mountains in North America, monarchs migrate up to 4,500 km each fall to overwinter in high-altitude fir forests in central Mexico; west of the Rockies, monarchs overwinter in groves along the California coast

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Summary

PURPOSE AND RATIONALE

Monarch butterflies (Danaus plexippus) exhibit one of the most spectacular animal migrations (Urquhart, 1976; Brower, 1977). Monarch conservation goals are generally based on models of monarch population viability (Semmens et al, 2016; Schultz et al, 2017), geographic prioritization (Flockhart et al, 2015; Oberhauser et al, 2017), threats (Saunders et al, 2017; Thogmartin et al, 2017a), and habitat (Thogmartin et al, 2017b) developed using limited datasets and expert opinion. The IMMP has three primary objectives: to (1) track longterm changes in the distribution and abundance of monarchs and their habitats (2) provide geographically and ecologically representative information to fill data gaps and update current population and habitat models, and (3) acquire information about how habitat conservation actions affect monarchs and their habitat. We discuss the benefits of the program to researchers, land managers, and citizen scientists, as well as the benefit of compatible and representative long-term data generated over a broad geography

SPATIALLY BALANCED RANDOM
DATA COLLECTION
Plot Description
Milkweed and Blooming Plant Survey
Egg and Larva Survey
Adult Monarch Survey
Survival and Parasitism
PILOT TESTING AND PROTOCOL REFINEMENT
DATA MANAGEMENT
AUTHOR CONTRIBUTIONS
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