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Monarch
butterflies usually find shelter in the pine and fir trees of central Mexico,
but logging has destroyed the long-established sanctuaries.
The Waning
Reign of Monarchs
Man and
Nature Believed to Be Conspirators In Devastation of Mexico's Butterfly
Population
CERRO
PELON, Mexico (By Mary Jordan and Kevin
Sullivan, Washington Post Foreign
Service) February
23, 2004 - High on a remote mountaintop, Alfredo Cruz
Colin gazed at a panorama of giant pines and firs where millions of orange and
black monarch butterflies spend the winter after flying as far as 2,000 miles
from Canada and the United States. He saw two things: one of North America's
most spectacular natural wonders and trees that could be sawed down and sold for
$300 each.
"We can contemplate the butterflies," said
Cruz, a lawyer. "Or we can send our children to school and feed our families"
with the cash from the cut trees. "It's a tough choice."
The winter migration of monarch butterflies
to Mexico, a stunning sight that draws vast numbers of tourists to mountain
forests 100 miles west of Mexico City, has been devastated this year. One of the
chief causes is logging that destroys butterfly sanctuaries, according to
Mexican and U.S. environmentalists.
The butterfly population this winter is the
lowest since researchers began detailed surveys 12 years ago and perhaps the
smallest since the 1970s, when international scientists first discovered the
colonies in central Mexico, according to Lincoln P. Brower, a biology professor
at Sweet Briar College in central Virginia and an authority on monarch
butterflies. He estimated that the population was at least 75 percent smaller
than last year's.
In the last two years the butterflies
carpeted an area spanning more than 20 acres, but this winter they cover a
little more than five acres, said Ernesto Enkerlin, chief of protected areas for
the Environmental Ministry. "We are not happy about having fewer monarch
butterflies," he said.
The reason for the dramatic drop appears to
be a combination of particularly cold, stormy weather in North America in recent
years, herbicide use in the United States and Canada that is killing milkweed
plants where butterflies lay their eggs, and persistent illegal logging in
Mexico, according to a report issued last week by a panel of monarch researchers
chaired by Brower.
Experts and officials agree that all three
factors have contributed to the decline in the butterfly population, but there
are differing views on whether the greater blame lies with nature or man. Brower
said that without further study, it was impossible to determine what portion of
the damage was caused by each factor.
But it is clear that the northeast face of
this mountain has "been stripped of forest and burned," destroying
long-established butterfly sanctuaries and leaving only one small butterfly area
this year, said Brower, who has visited the site almost every year since the
mid-1970s.
Conservationists are also concerned about
threats from herbicides, which they say are killing thousands of acres of wild
milkweed plants in the midwestern United States and Canada. While genetically
engineered crops such as soybeans and corn are resistant to the chemicals, the
weedkillers are causing massive destruction of butterfly eggs on milkweed
leaves, they said.
"Why should we care?" said Brower. "For the
same reasons we should care about the Mona Lisa or the beauty of Mozart's
music."
On this chilly mountaintop, reachable by a
long, steep horseback ride up to 10,000 feet above sea level, butterfly colonies
hang like enormous orange-and-black beards of Spanish moss. As they stirred to
life this past weekend, warmed by the afternoon sun, and took flight by the
thousands, Elidio Renya Corona, a park ranger, lamented that the size of the
colony had shrunk this year and that loggers were "wiping out" the butterflies'
winter home.
Officials at U.S. and international
conservation organizations, which have donated millions of dollars to protect
the migrating butterfly, said they were also alarmed at the shrinking
population. They noted that in Chincoteague, Va., and Cape May, N.J., two
important stops along the monarch route to Mexico, researchers also reported a
record low number of migrating butterflies as they passed through last fall.
Scientists agree that the monarch has a
great capacity to recover from dramatic die-offs. In the winter of 2001-02, as
many as 80 percent of the butterflies in Mexico perished in an unusual winter
storm, and the following year their numbers rose again. But scientists said they
were more disturbed by the steady deterioration of the butterflies' North
American habitat.
"All of us firmly believe that the
butterfly is capable of rebounding, but there is a limit," Brower said. "How
many bales of hay can you put on a camel's back before the last straw breaks
it?"
The butterflies begin arriving on this
mountaintop each November, resting on the native oyamel fir trees as they do in
more than a dozen sanctuaries in central Mexico, most of them in the state of
Michoacan.
Enkerlin, of the Environmental Ministry,
said he believed the low count was mainly due to the small numbers that arrived
from breeding grounds in the United States and Canada. He said the Mexican
government had recently sent in soldiers and other federal law enforcement
officials, and installed surveillance cameras, to seal off core areas of the
reserve from illegal logging.
But a news release from the ministry last
week played down logging as a cause for the small butterfly population this
year, prompting angry responses from environmentalists.
"It is a lie" to say illegal logging is not
a huge problem, said Homero Aridjis, an environmentalist who grew up near the
sanctuaries. He said the forests were under "systematic, criminal" attack by
loggers. He also said that Mexico, Canada and the United States were not doing
enough to protect this prize of nature.
Under a 1986 presidential decree, the
sanctuaries were declared a national park where logging was forbidden. But
officials and local residents say thousands of people continue to cut down trees
inside the protected area, which covers 135,000 acres. Some of the logging is
organized, with groups armed with guns and chain saws filling trucks with
freshly cut trees. Other culprits are individuals with axes, cutting a tree to
get cash for food or clothes.
Many local residents, nearly all poor
farmers, said it was unfair for the government to forbid them to cut down trees
in the forest as their fathers and grandfathers had. "They care more about
insects than people," said Hector Ramirez, who lives on Cerro Pelon and guides
tourists into the sanctuary. "The forest is the only thing we have."
Omar Vidal, director of the World Wildlife
Fund office in Mexico, said that from 2000 to 2004, $1 million in private funds
from the United States and government funds from Mexico had been paid to local
residents as an incentive not to cut trees and for their help in conserving the
forests.
But Cruz, the lawyer, said the money wasn't
enough to stop the logging. Residents interviewed here said that two years ago,
each family received about $150 to $200, but that last year the amount dropped
considerably. Cruz said a typical family needed about $800 a year to survive.
Early Saturday morning, before a stream of
tourists reached the top of Cerro Pelon on horseback to marvel at the spectacle
of the butterflies, more ominous noises echoed through the pine forest: the
rhythmic thunk of an ax and the roar of a chain saw.
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