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Donkees

(33,627 posts)
Sun Mar 8, 2026, 04:32 PM Sunday

Monarch Butterfly departure continues from overwintering sites in Mexico


"The massive departure of our exceptional monarch butterflies keeps on day by day," Estela Romero writes in her latest report for Journey North.

Estela Romero is an environmental educator whose work is made possible by the Monarch Butterfly Fund and Monarchs Across Georgia.



Monarch departure continues as the calendar turns to March
Mar 2, 2026
Monarchs continue to head north from overwintering sites in Mexico, with Estela Romero estimating that less than half the monarchs that inhabited El Rosario Sanctuary remain there as of the start of this week.
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Monarch Butterfly departure continues from overwintering sites in Mexico (Original Post) Donkees Sunday OP
Thank is absolutely beautiful. Thank you so much for sharing, donkees. debm55 Sunday #1
And the Ruby-throated Hummingbirds are now moving up the east coast Donkees Sunday #2
Thank you my friend. debm55 Sunday #3
Where are they headed? efhmc 17 hrs ago #4
Migration Map: Donkees 17 hrs ago #5
Our nature park here in the middle of Texas gets loads of them on the native purple prairie verbena. efhmc 15 hrs ago #6

Donkees

(33,627 posts)
5. Migration Map:
Mon Mar 9, 2026, 04:16 PM
17 hrs ago


Eastern North American Population
Overwintering in Mexico

The eastern population of North America’s monarchs overwinters in the same 11 to 12 mountain areas in the States of Mexico and Michoacan from October to late March.

Monarchs roost for the winter in oyamel fir forests at an elevation of 2,400 to 3,600 meters (nearly 2 miles above sea level). The mountain hillsides of oyamel forest provide an ideal microclimate for the butterflies. Here temperatures range from 0 to 15 degrees Celsius. If the temperature is lower, the monarchs will be forced to use their fat reserves. The humidity in the oyamel forest assures the monarchs won’t dry out allowing them to conserve their energy.

https://www.fs.usda.gov/wildflowers/pollinators/Monarch_Butterfly/migration/index.shtml

efhmc

(16,509 posts)
6. Our nature park here in the middle of Texas gets loads of them on the native purple prairie verbena.
Mon Mar 9, 2026, 06:07 PM
15 hrs ago
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