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common name: monarch butterfly
scientific name: Danaus plexippus Linnaeus (Lepidoptera: Nymphalidae: Danainae)

Introduction - Distribution - Description - Biology and Life Cycle - Hosts and Monarch Toxicity - Conservation Status - Natural Enemies - Selected References

Introduction (Back to Top)

The monarchs, Danaus plexippus Linnaeus, are among the best known of the world's butterflies, due to their remarkable ability to migrate, wide distribution, and charismatic appearance. The last Pleistocene glaciations in North America instigated migration to Mexico in the east and to Californian coast and deserts in the west. In the western U.S., the overwintering colonies are smaller and more numerous, while in Mexico, they are few, but more spectacular, with billions of butterflies concentrating in one spot.

Adult monarchs, Danaus plexippus Linnaeus, from Gainesville, Florida.

Figure 1. Adult monarchs, Danaus plexippus Linnaeus, from Gainesville, Florida. Photograph by Andrei Sourakov, Florida Museum of Natural History.

Adult monarchs, Danaus plexippus Linnaeus, migrating at their Mexican overwintering site in Sierra Madre, Michoacán.

Figure 2. Adult monarchs, Danaus plexippus Linnaeus, migrating at their Mexican overwintering site in Sierra Madre, Michoacán. Photograph by Andrei Sourakov, Florida Museum of Natural History.

Distribution (Back to Top)

Danaus plexippus is found throughout the Americas and Australia, with individuals reported in New Guinea and Western Europe. Sedentary populations that are found in Mexico, Central and South America (including the Caribbean islands) are somewhat different from migratory populations of D. p. plexippus found in North America. Several subspecies, such as M. p. megalippe (Mexico, southern U.S.) and M. p. menippe (South America) have been described. Monarchs fly from sea level up to 2,500 meters.

Some of the D. p. plexippus reach Cuba instead of Mexico, where they mix with the resident population of D. p. megalippe, from which they noticeably differ in behavior and wing length and shape (Dockx 2007).

Adult monarch, Danaus plexippus Linnaeus, emerging on Christmas day in the resident population in North Florida, Gainesville.

Figure 3. Adult monarch, Danaus plexippus Linnaeus, emerging on Christmas day in the resident population in North Florida, Gainesville. Photograph by Andrei Sourakov, Florida Museum of Natural History.

Adult migrating monarch, Danaus plexippus Linnaeus, in Mexico.

Figure 4. Adult migrating monarch, Danaus plexippus Linnaeus, in Mexico. Photograph by Andrei Sourakov, Florida Museum of Natural History.

Description (Back to Top)

Orange-and-black warning coloration of monarchs is noticeable, and its memorable pattern is directed at repelling insectivorous birds. Experiments conducted with captive blue jays showed that monarchs indeed are toxic (Brower et al. 1968). Being distasteful due to ingestion by larvae and sequestration by adults of cardenolides that are toxic to birds, monarch serves as a model for several mimetic species and is frequently confused with the viceroy (Limenitis archippus (Cramer, 1776)) and queen (Danaus gilippus (Cramer, 1775)) butterflies. That mimicry is considered to be Müllerian, with all species involved being distasteful to some degree and contributing to each others' defense (Ritland and Brower 1991).

Viceroy butterfly, Limenitis archippus (Cramer, 1776), upperside, Gainesville, Florida; a mimic of the monarch, Danaus plexippus Linnaeus.

Figure 5. Viceroy butterfly, Limenitis archippus (Cramer, 1776), upperside, Gainesville, Florida; a mimic of the monarch, Danaus plexippus Linnaeus. Photograph by Andrei Sourakov, Florida Museum of Natural History.

Viceroy butterfly, Limenitis archippus (Cramer, 1776), underside, Gainesville, Florida; a mimic of the monarch, Danaus plexippus Linnaeus.

Figure 6. Viceroy butterfly, Limenitis archippus (Cramer, 1776), underside, Gainesville, Florida; a mimic of the monarch, Danaus plexippus Linnaeus. Photograph by Andrei Sourakov, Florida Museum of Natural History.

Other than its mimics, the monarch can be confused with very few other butterflies. However, on the islands of Hispaniola and Jamaica, a smaller Jamaican monarch, Danaus cleophile (Godart, 1819), can be found flying together with the D. plexippus.

Jamaican monarch, Danaus cleophile (Godart, 1819), ovipositing on Asclepias nivea in Cordillera Central, Dominican Republic.

Figure 7. Jamaican monarch, Danaus cleophile (Godart, 1819), ovipositing on Asclepias nivea in Cordillera Central, Dominican Republic. Photograph by Andrei Sourakov, Florida Museum of Natural History.

Biology and Life Cycle (Back to Top)

Monarchs lay their eggs singly on underside of the leaf and sometimes on the flowers of different milkweeds (Asclepidaceae: Asclepias).

Egg of the monarch butterfly, Danaus plexippus Linnaeus, on the underside of the leaf of scarlet milkweed, Asclepias curassavica, Gainesville, Florida.

Figure 8. Egg of the monarch butterfly, Danaus plexippus Linnaeus, on the underside of the leaf of scarlet milkweed, Asclepias curassavica, Gainesville, Florida. Photograph by Andrei Sourakov, Florida Museum of Natural History.

Link to video of egg hatching

The first instar larva is white with a black head. The larva develops a more conspicuous striated yellow-and-black coloration in the second instar. This coloration varies depending on subspecies in mature larvae. Larvae also develop two thoracic and two abdominal dorsal filaments.

First instar larva of the monarch butterfly, Danaus plexippus Linnaeus, hatches from the egg, which it immediately consumes.

Figure 9. First instar larva of the monarch butterfly, Danaus plexippus Linnaeus, hatches from the egg, which it immediately consumes. Gainesville, Florida. Photograph by Andrei Sourakov, Florida Museum of Natural History.

Fourth instar larva of the monarch butterfly, Danaus plexippus Linnaeus, Gainesville, Florida.

Figure 10. Fourth instar larva of the monarch butterfly, Danaus plexippus Linnaeus, Gainesville, Florida. Photograph by Andrei Sourakov, Florida Museum of Natural History.

Fifth instar larva of the monarch butterfly, Danaus plexippus Linnaeus, feeding on scarlet milkweed, Asclepias curassavica.

Figure 11. Fifth instar larva of the monarch butterfly, Danaus plexippus Linnaeus, feeding on scarlet milkweed,  Asclepias curassavica. Photograph by Andrei Sourakov, Florida Museum of Natural History.

Close-up of the head of a fifth instar larva of the monarch butterfly, Danaus plexippus Linnaeus, feeding on scarlet milkweed, Asclepias curassavica.

Figure 12. Close-up of the head of a fifth instar larva of the monarch butterfly, Danaus plexippus Linnaeus, feeding on scarlet milkweed, Asclepias curassavica. Photograph by Andrei Sourakov, Florida Museum of Natural History.

Link to video of caterpillar creating chrysalis

The pupa (chrysalis) is formed by the larva hanging on a substrate, such as underside of leaves and twigs, usually away from the host plant. When formed, it is green with gold markings.

Pupa of the monarch butterfly, Danaus plexippus Linnaeus.

Figure 13. Pupa of the monarch butterfly, Danaus plexippus Linnaeus. Photograph by Andrei Sourakov, Florida Museum of Natural History.

Link to video of caterpillar forming chrysalis

Adult monarch butterfly, Danaus plexippus Linnaeus, emerging from the pupal case.

Figure 14. Adult monarch butterfly, Danaus plexippus Linnaeus, emerging from the pupal case. Photograph by Andrei Sourakov, Florida Museum of Natural History.

Link to video of adult emerging

Development from egg to adult takes less than a month. In North America, the monarchs go through at least four generations a year, before they start migrating south in the Fall.

Adults are strong fliers and can fly for 11 hours straight. In the Fall, enough fat is stored in the adults to allow a continuous 1000 km flight without feeding. Some make a journey of a total of 4000 km to reach overwintering sites in the Sierra Madre de Oriente, where they settle inside the coniferous forest of the state of Michoacán. Monarchs also fly across Gulf of Mexico with overwater flights of 600 km.

Adult monarch butterflies, Danaus plexippus Linnaeus, covering fir trees in the overwintering colony at El Rosario, in Sierra Madre, Michoacán, Mexico.

Figure 15. Adult monarch butterflies, Danaus plexippus Linnaeus, covering fir trees in the overwintering colony at El Rosario, in Sierra Madre, Michoacán, Mexico. Photograph by Andrei Sourakov, Florida Museum of Natural History.

Close-up of adult monarch butterflies, Danaus plexippus Linnaeus, covering fir trees in the overwintering colony at El Rosario, in Sierra Madre, Michoacán, Mexico.

Figure 16. Close-up of adult monarch butterflies, Danaus plexippus Linnaeus, covering fir trees in the overwintering colony at El Rosario, in Sierra Madre, Michoacán, Mexico. Photograph by Andrei Sourakov, Florida Museum of Natural History.

Adult monarch butterflies, Danaus plexippus Linnaeus, migrating at their Mexican overwintering site in Sierra Madre, Michoacán, Mexico.

Figure 17. Adult monarch butterflies, Danaus plexippus Linnaeus, migrating at their Mexican overwintering site in Sierra Madre, Michoacán, Mexico. Photograph by Andrei Sourakov, Florida Museum of Natural History.

Close-up of an adult monarch butterfly, Danaus plexippus Linnaeus, migrating at its Mexican overwintering site in Sierra Madre, Michoacán, Mexico.

Figure 18. Close-up of an adult monarch butterfly, Danaus plexippus Linnaeus, migrating at its Mexican overwintering site in Sierra Madre, Michoacán, Mexico. Photograph by Andrei Sourakov, Florida Museum of Natural History.

A tagging program was initiated by F. A. Urquhart of the Royal Ontario Museum in the 1950s and is continued to this day. It allowed scientists to determine the migration path of monarchs.

Tagged adult monarch, Danaus plexippus Linnaeus, Gainesville, Florida, released during the Butterfly Festival, October 2007.

Figure 19. Tagged adult monarch, Danaus plexippus Linnaeus, Gainesville, Florida, released during the Butterfly Festival, October 2007. Photograph by Andrei Sourakov, Florida Museum of Natural History.

Monarchs feed extensively on the way, accumulating body fat sufficient to last them through the winter. At the overwintering sites in Mexico, the monarchs spend over four months in a reproductive diapause. They feed and drink as the weather warms up, but return to their resting sites.

Adult monarchs, Danaus plexippus Linnaeus, drinking at the creek in El Rosario Colony, Michoacán, Mexico.

Figure 20. Adult monarchs, Danaus plexippus Linnaeus, drinking at the creek in El Rosario Colony, Michoacán, Mexico. Photograph by Andrei Sourakov, Florida Museum of Natural History.

Adult monarchs, Danaus plexippus Linnaeus, sunning themselves before going to feed, El Rosario overwintering colony, Michoacán, Mexico.

Figure 21. Adult monarchs, Danaus plexippus Linnaeus, sunning themselves before going to feed, El Rosario overwintering colony, Michoacán, Mexico. Photograph by Andrei Sourakov, Florida Museum of Natural History.

Adult monarch, Danaus plexippus Linnaeus, feeding.

Figure 22. Adult monarch, Danaus plexippus Linnaeus, feeding. Photograph by Andrei Sourakov, Florida Museum of Natural History.

Courtship behavior of monarchs has been described in detail and consists of a mating ritual, where male grasps the female in the air and brings her down to the ground, where mating occurs. Mating occurs several times, both during the summer and at the overwintering sites. Mating attempts frequently fail due to resisting by females (e.g., Frey, 1997).

Monarchs begin to fly north in March, reproducing along the way. Migration north continues, with the second and third generations recolonizing the continent.

The ability to navigate to the overwintering sites is genetic and is linked to time-compensated sun compass orientation. This ability requires constant recalibration of genetic program by changing surrounding. It is linked to the activity of the central complex is a midline structure consisting of protocerebral bridge and central body in Monarch's brain.

Geomagnetic forces are probably used as monarchs get closer to their overwintering sites, since the migratory monarchs' bodies contain higher quantities of magnetic material than non-migrating butterflies. The vicinity of overwintering sites in the Mexican Transvolcanic Range contains high level of magnetic anomalies, which probably helps monarchs to find them. Social behavior and pheromones probably also play large role in choosing the overwintering site.

To understand migration, the gene expression patterns that define the migrating monarchs are being investigated. Specific genes are regulated by juvenile hormone, which is responsible for interruption of reproductive behavior and initiation of migration. Micro RNAs regulate gene expression, and each miRNA can regulate several proteins. In other systems, miRNAs are involved in epigenetic developmental events. They may be involved in initiating/mediating the migratory state in monarch butterflies. Recent analysis of genomes of migratory and non-migratory monarchs shows that monarchs originated in North America from a migratory ancestor. The effort to assess genome of monarchs, which proves to be smaller than in other butterflies, and more similar in size to that of mosquitoes is being made (Zhu et al. 2008).

Monarchs are great model organisms for researching many general questions about animals in general. For instance, recent studies conducted on monarchs allowed for understanding the evolution and function of cryptochrome proteins in animals (Zhu et al. 2008). Cryptochromes are critical for circadian timing in butterfly's clock mechanism. In monarchs, one of the cryptochromes functions as a likely circadian photoreceptor, while another appears to function as the major transcriptional repressor of the clockwork transcriptional feedback loop.

Hosts and Monarch Toxicity (Back to Top)

Monarch toxicity has been linked to the toxicity of the plants upon which they feed. Monarchs oviposit on milkweeds of the genus Asclepias from which the caterpillars collect the cardiac glycosides toxic to birds. These substances are passed on to the adult butterflies, which are also toxic. The idea of automimicry (that some monarchs are more toxic than others, but that the birds, unable to distinguish between the traits, avoid all of them) has been investigated (Brower et al. 1970). Apparently, there are costs and benefits to the ingestion of glycosides, since it was shown that monarch females prefer plants with intermediate cardenolide level, rejecting higher and lower level-containing plants (Oyeyele and Zalucki, 2008).

Adult monarch butterfly, Danaus plexippus Linnaeus, feeding on flower of scarlet milkweed, Asclepias curassavica.

Figure 23. Adult monarch butterfly, Danaus plexippus Linnaeus, feeding on flower of scarlet milkweed, Asclepias curassavica. Photograph by Andrei Sourakov, Florida Museum of Natural History.

Pinewoods milkweed, Asclepias humistrata Walter (Apocynaceae), a host of the monarch butterfly, Danaus plexippus Linnaeus.

Figure 24. Pinewoods milkweed, Asclepias humistrata Walter (Apocynaceae), a host of the monarch butterfly, Danaus plexippus Linnaeus. Photograph by Jerry Butler, University of Florida.

White swamp milkweed, Asclepias perennis Walter (Apocynaceae), a host of the monarch butterfly, Danaus plexippus Linnaeus

Figure 25. White swamp milkweed, Asclepias perennis Walter (Apocynaceae), a host of the monarch butterfly, Danaus plexippus Linnaeus. Photograph by Donald Hall, University of Florida.

Butterfly milkweed, Asclepias tuberosa L. (Apocynaceae)), a host of the monarch butterfly, Danaus plexippus Linnaeus.

Figure 26. Butterfly milkweed, Asclepias tuberosa L. (Apocynaceae)), a host of the monarch butterfly, Danaus plexippus Linnaeus. Photograph by Donald Hall, University of Florida.

Pink swamp milkweed, Asclepias incarnata L. (Apocynaceae), a host of the monarch butterfly, Danaus plexippus Linnaeus.

Figure 27. Pink swamp milkweed, Asclepias incarnata L. (Apocynaceae), a host of the monarch butterfly, Danaus plexippus Linnaeus. Photograph by Donald Hall, University of Florida

Scarlet milkweed, Asclepias curassavica L. (Apocynaceae), a host of the monarch butterfly, Danaus plexippus Linnaeus.

Figure 28. Scarlet milkweed, Asclepias curassavica L. (Apocynaceae), a host of the monarch butterfly, Danaus plexippus Linnaeus. Photograph by Donald Hall, University of Florida.

Common milkweed, Asclepias syriaca L. (Apocynaceae), a host of the monarch butterfly, Danaus plexippus Linnaeus.

Figure 29. Common milkweed, Asclepias syriaca L. (Apocynaceae), a host of the monarch butterfly, Danaus plexippus Linnaeus. Photograph by Donald Hall, University of Florida.

Conservation Status (Back to Top)

Monarchs are not endangered as a species due to many sedentary populations in the south of its range. However, the deforestation around their overwintering sites in Mexico puts the northeastern population of monarch and the remarkable phenomenon of migration in danger. For instance, in 2002 severe winter weather killed off an estimated 80% of Monarchs in overwintering colonies in Sierra Chincua and Sierra Campanario, with some colonies reduced in size by 90% (Brower et al. 2004). In late August 2014, the Xerces Society, Center for Food Safety, Center for Biological Diversity and Dr. Lincoln Brower submitted a petition to the Secretary of the Interior requesting the Monarch butterfly be listed as “threatened” under the Endangered Species Act.

A few years ago, the controversy over the influence of Bt corn on Monarch mortality arose. However, though mortality due to ingestion of corn pollen does occur, it has been shown that its effect on Monarch population might not be as dramatic as was initially thought (Auman-Bauer 2001).

Natural Enemies (Back to Top)

Birds such as black-beaked orioles and black-headed grosbeaks attack monarchs at their overwintering sites. Apparently the toxins deteriorate during the migration, hence the birds can eat them. Orioles slit open the monarchs' abdomens avoiding most of the toxins in the cuticle. Grosbeaks eat the entire abdomen and can tolerate higher levels of cardenolides. These two bird account for over 60% of the total monarch mortality. Among other vertebrates, rats have been observed feeding on monarchs at overwintering sites.

Invertebrate predators such as ants, spiders, and wasps attack monarch larvae on milkweed plants. Tachinid flies and braconid wasps are known to parasitise larvae. Several entomopathogenic organisms can infect monarchs, including a nuclear polyhedrosis virus and Pseudomonas bacteria, protozoan parasites such as Ophryocystis elektroscirrha, and a microsporidian Nosema species (McLaughlin and Myers 2007).

Selected References (Back to Top)