Fire creates host plant patches for monarch butterflies |
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Authors: | Kristen A. Baum Wyatt V. Sharber |
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Affiliation: | Department of Zoology, Oklahoma State University, Stillwater, OK 74078, USA |
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Abstract: | Monarch butterflies (Danaus plexippus) depend on the presence of host plants (Asclepias spp.) within their breeding range for reproduction. In the southern Great Plains, Asclepias viridis is a perennial that flowers in May and June, and starts to senesce by August. It is locally abundant and readily used by monarchs as a host plant. We evaluated the effects of summer prescribed fire on A. viridis and the use of A. viridis by monarch butterflies. Summer prescribed fire generated a newly emergent population of A. viridis that was absent in other areas. Pre-migrant monarch butterflies laid eggs on A. viridis in summer burned plots in late August and September, allowing adequate time for a new generation of adult monarchs to emerge and migrate south to their overwintering grounds. Thus, summer prescribed fire may provide host plant patches and/or corridors for pre-migrant monarchs during a time when host plant availability may be limited in other areas. |
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Keywords: | Asclepias viridis Danaus plexippus migration milkweed prescribed fire reproduction |
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