Starting in March, millions of monarch butterflies will begin making their spring migration through Texas from their winter home in Mexico to all points north, as far as Canada.
“Monarch butterflies begin to leave their Mexican wintering sites in mid-March and have usually all departed by the end of March. At this point, many of them have already mated, but both sexes leave the sites and migrate north and mating continues throughout the journey north,” says MonarchNet.
The monarch butterfly is the official insect of the state of Texas and for good reason, as the Lone Star State is a key destination for monarch butterfly migration in the spring and fall.
“Texas is an important state in monarch migration because it is situated between the principal breeding grounds in the north and the overwintering areas in Mexico,” explains Texas Parks and Wildlife (TPWD). “Monarchs funnel through Texas both in the fall and the spring.
The spring migration for monarch butterflies is not simply a mirror image of the fall migration. While a single monarch will make the arduous migration in the fall, the spring migration will take generations for monarchs to reach their summer home.
“The monarchs that overwinter in Mexico fly north to repopulate the southern half of the US, and their offspring complete the journey to the northern US and southern Canada,” says MonarchNet.
While a single monarch will fly up to 3,000 miles in the fall to make it to the Mexico winter grounds, it will take as many as four generations to complete the return trip in the spring as the spring monarch butterflies have a lifespan of approximately 3 to 5 weeks. Alternatively, the fall monarch butterflies can live as long as nine months.
Unlike in the fall, when large roosts of monarchs migrate together, the spring migration is much more spread out and sporadic.
According to Texan and monarch biologist Dr. Bill Calver, “It’s not dramatic … you never see too many monarchs at once. You may see one or two an hour, and that would be a good spring migration. Sometimes along the coast, you may see ten or twenty at once, but that would be during a very strong migration. The reason you see so few in the spring is that there are far fewer monarchs alive in the spring than in the fall. There has been mortality at the overwintering sites in Mexico and mortality along the migration. Your chances of seeing high numbers of monarchs at once are not good. They’re just too dispersed.”
Texas has about 30 native milkweed varieties, which play an essential role in migrating monarch butterflies in the spring, providing food for their caterpillars and a place to lay eggs.
“As warm temperatures and lengthening days arrive, the migratory generation of monarchs finishes the development they halted prior to their migration. They become reproductive, breed, and lay the eggs of the new generation. This starts the northern journey back to North America. Unlike the generation before them, who made a one-generation journey south, successive generations make the journey north,” says the U.S. Department of Agriculture.
The World Wildlife Fund (WWF) says that milkweed is the only plant on which monarchs will lay their eggs and the only source of food for baby caterpillars.
“Planting the right species of milkweed in a given area can help these amazing butterflies and other pollinators thrive,” says the WWF.
WWF says to follow these 3 steps to add milkweed in your area for monarch butterflies:
Monarch butterflies play an important role in our ecosystem.
“Monarch butterflies are not just breathtaking to watch—they play a crucial role as pollinators, supporting ecosystems across North America. During their migration, they carry pollen between flowers, aiding plant reproduction and benefiting the wildlife that depends on those plants for food,” says MonarchNet.
Here are some other monarch butterfly facts:
Just remember, if you miss the monarch butterflies on their trek through Texas this spring, you have a great chance to catch them again in the fall on their return migration to Mexico.