Cambridge Butterfly Conservatory tracks migration journey of monarchs - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 15, 2024, 12:26 AM | Calgary | -4.9°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Kitchener-Waterloo

Cambridge Butterfly Conservatory tracks migration journey of monarchs

The Cambridge Butterfly Conservatory placed tiny stickers on the wings of monarchs to track their migration journey down to Mexico.
Jennifer Tremeer releases a cage of monarch butterflies after they were tagged with stickers at the conservatory. The butterflies will now head to Mexico for migration. (Peggy Lam/CBC)

JenniferTremeeris"passionate" about monarch butterflies.

With a wildlife collector's permit from the Ministry of Natural Resources,Tremeerhas raised approximately threecages worth of monarchs herselfthis summer.

"I found them outside in the wild, I've been feeding them lots of milk weed, cleaning up a lot of poop from these caterpillars cause they do poop a lot," she said.

Tremeer is the education and interpretive services coordinator at the Cambridge Butterfly Conservatory. On the weekend, the conservatory held its 18th annual tag and release event of monarch butterflies. The public was invited to help tag the monarch butterflies, then watch them be released.

Tremeer said it takes approximately eight to 10 weeks for the butterflies to make their way to Mexico.

Once they're there, people who see them will report their tag number toMonarch Watchand researchers from the University of Kansas will then collect the databased on the stickers and use the information for conservation.

"They are an endangered species so they do need to be protected," Tremeersaid.

"They're also important pollinators and pollinators are at risk."

The monarchs will sleep in Mexico during the winter time and then migrate to Texas to mate and lay their eggs.

Then it's "a relay race to make it back here," Tremeersaid.

"It ends up being the great grandchildren, sometimes the great great grandchildren that actually returns to our backyard next year."