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Monarch Butterflies Surge 64% in Mexico

WWF-Mexico reports a 64% rise in monarch butterfly colonies covering 7.24 acres, attributed to conservation efforts and reduced forest degradation in their overwintering habitat.

  • On March 17, 2026, WWF-Mexico reported that eastern monarch butterflies occupied 7.24 acres versus 4.42 acres last winter, indicating a rebound in overwintering habitat.
  • WWF credited stronger forest management and local tree nurseries for supporting reserve restoration and local livelihoods, and Maria Jose Villanueva, WWF-Mexico Director General, said the reports indicate conservation measures are moving in the right direction.
  • Field teams deploying transmitters and tags documented microchips on 172 monarchs in February 2026 across seven sanctuaries and 470 Blu+ transmitters deployed by the Xerces Society and partners in fall 2025.
  • The governments of Mexico, the United States and Canada are intensifying trilateral efforts to protect the migration route, with SEMARNAT engaged in ongoing discussions and Sheinbaum proposing USMCA protections.
  • A habitat assessment found 6.30 acres degraded , with losses of 4.58 acres , 1.3 acres , and.28 acres , while researchers warn climate-change projections through 2090 threaten forests.
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In Mexican Forests, Monarch Butterflies Halt Their Decline

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Science Daily broke the news in United States on Tuesday, March 17, 2026.
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