Monarch Butterflies
Monarchs happen to be one of my granddaughter’s school mascot and mighty they are!
No animal on Earth travels quite like the eastern monarch butterfly.
Its journey begins in the early days of spring on a few mountains in central Mexico.
Millions of the monarchs (Danaus plexippus plexippus) fill the branches of oyamel firs, and as the temperature warms up, they soak in the sun and begin their epic journey northward — a 3,000-mile trip that looks more like a bird’s migration than an insect’s.
But it’s not only the miles that make the butterfly’s journey so remarkable — it’s also the means.
A typical monarch butterfly lives for only about four weeks, not nearly long enough to complete the journey to the northern U.S. and Canada. So the migration becomes a multi-generational one.
In a typical year, it will take four generations for monarch butterflies to finish the seasonal quest their great-grandparents started. To return south in the fall, a “super generation” — also known as the Methuselah generation (after the long-lived biblical patriarch) because it can live eight times longer than its ancestors — will travel 50 miles a day by riding thermal currents southward before finally resting in the same oyamel firs in central Mexico.
All hail the monarch!
We always love sharing fun facts!
With love from your Two Chums,
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And your Chums audience loves learning these fun facts from you. I always enjoy reading these posts and the things I soak in as part of my life education. But I don’t think I’m going to scrub shaving cream on my carpeting. I’ll just call my cleaning man once a year to professionally shampoo my carpeting.