Planning for People & Pollinators in Cities & Towns,
connected researchers from the Field Museum’s Keller Science Action
Center with local officials, organizations and volunteers to review
results of last year’s habitat surveys in Logan County, Peoria and
Carbondale and strategize about ways to promote crucial monarch
habitat.
Using Lincoln, Peoria and Carbondale as case studies, participants
discussed opportunities and challenges for creating monarch habitat
in small and mid-sized cities. The day included a brief walk-through
of monarch conservation planning and an outline of resources
available to help support conservation efforts.
Lex Winter (right) of the Field Museum’s Keller
Science Action Center, leads a group discussion on promoting monarch
habitat.
Through small group exercises, participants
strategized about what communities could do to prioritize a
community-based monarch conservation plan and outlined resources,
materials, guidance and support that might be needed to develop and
implement monarch/pollinator plans.
The Lincoln College partnership with the Field Museum began last
year with a summer-long project in which Conservation Biology majors
surveyed Logan County to assess and document the existing pollinator
habitat.
Abigal Derby Lewis, of the Field Museum’s Keller
Science Action Center, address workshop participants.
Mike Miller of the Peoria Park District, discusses
the Peoria area’s 2018 habitat survey findings.
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Sam Stuber of Tremont-based Stuber Land Design
discusses how private landowners can encourage monarch habitat
restoration.
According to information from the Field Museum,
monarch populations have declined by 80 percent over the past two
decades, stemming in part from the loss of milkweed that serves as
their food source for both the juvenile and adult life stage.
Lincoln College Conservation Biology Lead Faculty,
Dr. Julia Ossler, discusses the College’s monarch habitat survey.
Every fall millions of monarch butterflies migrate
over 3,000 miles to Mexico for a safe place to spend the winter.
Following winter, they migrate back part way, to areas like Texas,
where they mate and lay their eggs on milkweed plants. After a few
days, caterpillars hatch and consume the milkweed as a food source
to help them complete their life cycle by creating a chrysalis and
transforming into their iconic butterfly form. The new butterflies
fly another few hundred miles north before finding another patch of
milkweed and repeating the process. It can take the butterflies
upwards of five generations to complete the journey to Illinois.
Monarch butterflies play a crucial role in the ecosystem as
pollinators for countless vital plants. As the adults seek out
nutrient rich nectar from the milkweed flowers, and inadvertently
transfer pollen from one plant to another and assist in those
species’ reproduction.
Globally, 87 of the leading 115 food crops evaluated are dependent
on animal pollinators such as monarch butterflies, contributing 35%
of global food production. A decline in their population could have
negative ramifications on farmers. Even in their own ecosystem,
monarch butterflies are an important food source for several common
birds such as orioles and grosbeaks.
[Mark Gordon
Public Relations and Media Manager
Lincoln College] |