Monarch butterflies migrate south
Fall sets in motion a journey of some 3,000 miles for these monarch butterflies, which migrate from southern Canada to their wintering habitat in central Mexico. There, they cluster together in fir trees, creating the illusion of orange, fluttering foliage. They’ll remain in their winter roosts until March, when the journey back north begins. But no one individual monarch will complete the full round trip, which exceeds the normal monarch life span; instead it will take four generations of monarchs to complete the full migration, each individual seemingly driven by an internal compass that guides its flight path.
Quick fact: Monarch caterpillars eat only milkweed, and monarch butterflies need milkweed to lay their eggs. Some people who live in the monarchs' migration path plant milkweed to help support the butterflies.
Quick fact: Monarch caterpillars eat only milkweed, and monarch butterflies need milkweed to lay their eggs. Some people who live in the monarchs' migration path plant milkweed to help support the butterflies.