Monarch Watch Update - June 19, 2003Monarch Watch Update - June 19, 2003
http://www.MonarchWatch.org
monarch@ku.edu 
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Contents:
1) Welcome!
2) BugBear Virus Attack
3) Status of the Population
4) Rate of Progression of the Spring Migration
5) When does the migration northward end?
6) Early Summer Conditions
7) Orientation and Navigation: Terminology Issues
8) Dr. Fred Urquhart – In Memoriam
9) 2003 Membership/Tagging Kits
10) 2002 Tag Recoveries - Coming Soon!
11) How to Unsubscribe from this Update
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2) BugBear Virus Attack
You may have recently received a BugBear infected email apparently sent by me 
and/or Monarch Watch with "Monarch Watch Update - March 19, 2003" as the 
subject. Unfortunately, return addresses in BugBear infected email are false so 
the virus didn't actually come from me but I get the pleasure of receiving all 
of the flak (800 messages and counting ;-)
It is likely that KU's list processor (the computer that sends out our updates) 
was a victim of BugBear's actions and as a result sent the bogus email with the 
virus attached to all recipients of this Update.
If your AntiVirus software did not intercept this little bug there is a chance 
that your PC running Windows 95, Windows 98, Windows NT, Windows 2000, Windows 
XP, or Windows Me may be infected (Windows 3.x, Macintosh, OS/2, UNIX, and Linux 
systems are not affected). Please read the information below and take 
appropriate action.
We apologize for any inconvenience this has caused you and are researching 
measures we can take to prevent similar attacks in the future. I can't imagine 
living without email, but is becoming increasingly difficult to live with it!
BugBear Virus Information
Antivirus manufacturers have declared a worldwide high alert for the BugBear.b 
Virus/Worm which is currently spreading through email, across corporate and 
small business networks, and through shared network folders. At the time of this 
writing Bugbear is not known to damage computers, however it does install a 
"backdoor", a "key-logger", and it disables most virus protection programs.
More information is available here:
http://www.ku.edu/acs/virus/viruses/bugbear.shtml
http://securityresponse.symantec.com/avcenter/venc/data/w32.bugbear.b@mm.html
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3) Status of the Population – by Chip Taylor
One can’t judge the status of the monarch population on the basis of what one 
sees in a single location. If I were to do that, I’d have to say that this is 
not going to be a good year for monarchs. Here in eastern Kansas monarchs have 
been scarce and I didn’t see my 5th monarch of the year until the 6th of June. 
Eggs and larvae have been non-existent locally and there hasn’t been a strong 
flow of other migratory butterflies that we often see in good monarch years. 
Yet, aside from this location, I’m optimistic about the reports from the rest of 
the country. The drought has diminished (see below) and the milkweeds appear to 
be in good condition in most locations. Moderately good numbers of monarchs have 
been reported from nearly all of the core areas of the summer breeding range 
over the last three weeks. It is definitely looking good for large fall 
migration – assuming normal rainfall and temperatures from now to the end of 
August.
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4) Rate of Progression of the Spring Migration – by Chip Taylor
As I pointed out last month, the pace at which monarchs move northward in May 
and June is the fastest of the entire annual cycle. This dash to the north has 
been repeated in the last 4 weeks and the number of monarchs sighted in the 
upper Midwest as reported to Dplex-L and Journey North
http://www.learner.org/jnorth/images/graphics/monarch/monarch_maplarge060603.gif
has been quite good. During the last month the front of the distribution has 
advanced from about 42 degrees N to close to 50 degrees N, a distance of 600 
miles – about 20 miles per day. However, the butterflies flying this course 
originated well south of 42 degrees N and our projection of distances covered by 
individual butterflies of 50-55 miles per day still seems reasonable.
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5) When does the migration northward end - or does it? – by Chip Taylor
As mentioned above, I saw my 5th monarch of the year on the 6th of June. It was 
headed NNE in clear directional flight – strong powered flight about 2 meters 
above ground. On Sunday the 8th I saw about 6 monarchs and I’ve seen a few more 
in the last three days, none of which showed any sign of directional flight. Two 
years ago, when we had a good flight of monarchs through Lawrence in late May 
and early June, we closely watched all monarchs for directional flight. The last 
directional flight detected that year was on the 5th of June. After this date 
the monarchs appeared to remain local and the males started to patrol the 
milkweed patches looking for females, a behavior not seen earlier in the season.
Our observations are not consistent with those of others; one of the prevailing 
theories of the monarch migration that suggests that the monarchs migrate 
continuously. Clearly, we need more information on the behavior of early summer 
monarchs to determine if they continue to migrate or if the migration stops at 
different latitudes at different dates. My guess is that the migration stops at 
each degree of latitude northward at a particular date, that these dates can be 
predicted, and that all directional migration stops before the 21st of June at 
all latitudes. Ok, I’ve done it – my neck and reputation is out there. Am I 
right or wrong? Please send me your observations or post them to Dplex-L.
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6) Early Summer Conditions – by Chip Taylor
The drought continues to abate. Most of the primary breeding area for summer 
monarchs is no longer considered to be under drought stress. The map on the 
Drought Monitor web site for 3 June (http://www.drought.unl.edu/dm/monitor.html) 
shows that the drought still lingers for much of northern Kansas, most of 
Nebraska, most of South Dakota and the western half of the North Dakota. Drought 
conditions persist in NE Minnesota, a mostly forested region that is generally 
devoid of milkweeds and monarchs. Northern Maine continues to experience 
abnormally dry to moderate drought conditions. The water levels in the ponds and 
lakes are still low in most of eastern Kansas and the agriculturists are warning 
us that the subsurface soil moisture levels are low, meaning that a mid-summer 
hiatus in the rainfall could be more severe than one might expect from low 
rainfall amounts alone.
The milkweed is lush for now and the few monarchs in the area are laying eggs on 
a variety of milkweed species. On the 10th I found two monarch eggs on Asclepias 
purpurascens (purple milkweed). This is a logical host for monarchs but the 
plant is so uncommon that this is the first time I’ve seen eggs on this species. 
Last month I reported that one of my Asclepias incarnata (swamp milkweed) plants 
was getting a jump on the season. It started blooming at the end of May and is 
now in full bloom. This plant is at least 5 weeks ahead of its wild 
counterparts. Milkweed bloom in this area of eastern Kansas is extensive now and 
will increase in the next 10 days. A. viridis, A. amplexicaulis, and A. meadii 
are now past peak bloom but A. tuberosa is lighting up the prairies with its 
flaming orange and A. sullivantii and A. syriaca are about to burst forth with 
in glorious color and perfume. A. viridiflora has started to bloom in the best 
sites but we can count on this species to have flowers for the next 6 weeks.
Overall, early summer conditions appear to be favorable for monarchs over most 
of the breeding range - Nebraska and the western Dakotas excepted.

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7) Orientation and Navigation: Terminology Issues – by Chip Taylor
The appearance of a paper entitled "Illuminating the Circadian Clock in Monarch 
Butterfly Migration" by Oren Froy, Anthony L. Gotter, Amy L. Casselman and 
Steven M. Reppert in Science last month spawned a number of calls from reporters 
asking me to comment. The study is admirable and I will comment on it in the 
next Season Summary; however, at one point the authors use the term navigation 
in a manner that raised issues with me as to when it is appropriate to use the 
term navigation and when to use orientation. Unfortunately, these terms are not 
well defined or limited in the behavioral literature and they are often used 
interchangeably. This leads to some confusion since the use of a term 
incorrectly may obscure an underlying process and it does in this case. If we 
define orientation as the response of an organism to a proximate stimulus, such 
as moving toward a light or heat source, moving directionally toward an odor 
source, etc., and navigation as a bearing (directional movement) assumed by an 
organism toward an unseen goal in the absence of a proximate stimulus, we can 
see there is a clear difference in these terms, and by implication, when they 
should be used. It is clear from the three papers published on the topic that 
monarchs use a time compensated sun compass. These papers show that monarchs 
have a time sense, a daily rhythm, and that they use the sun as a reference, a 
proximate stimulus (an orientation cue) by which they measure their bearing at 
any time of day. They do not use the sun to navigate to Mexico. The sun does not 
set the bearing, it is set by something else. Consider the following: If we take 
a specific latitude, let’s say 45N and go from the Midwest (bearing of 180) to 
the east we will find that the monarchs have different bearings as we go along 
this gradient with those in the east heading progressively in more southwesterly 
directions (bearing close to 235 just inland from the coast). In other words, 
they are rotated to the right as you face south. This indicates that monarchs 
acquire information that allows them to respond to longitude along the same 
latitude. The passage of the sun is symmetrical along this latitude and 
longitudinal span, so it cannot set the bearing or navigational component of the 
monarch’s flight. Although it is clear that the sun compass is a component of 
the navigational system used by monarchs to migrate, it is a proximate reference 
or cue. Sun compass orientation, by itself, is not sufficient to explain how 
monarchs navigate to reach the overwintering sites in Mexico. Although the 
papers on sun compass orientation are valuable contributions toward our 
understanding of the monarch migration, how monarchs set their bearing remains a 
mystery and the one that needs to be solved before we fully understand how they 
navigate during the migration.
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8) Dr. Fred Urquhart – In Memoriam
Professor Emeritus Frederick Urquhart of zoology, an internationally renowned 
expert in the migration patterns of the monarch butterfly, died November 3, 
2002, at the age of 90. A complete obituary notice that recently appeared in the 
University of Toronto Bulletin is available here:
http://www.monarchwatch.org/news/urquhart.htm
Addendum – by Chip Taylor
The Urquharts were honored for their work on monarchs and the Insect Migration 
Studies program they managed on several occasions. In 1998 they were presented 
with the Order of Canada. This is the highest award given to Canadian citizens 
in recognition of life long contributions to the country. For more information 
see:
http://www.zoo.toronto.edu/zfa/Newsletter-htm/oct-98/order.htm
They were also recipients of the W.W.H. Gunn Award – the highest award presented 
by the Federation of Ontario Naturalists. Dr Urquhart had been a founder of this 
organization in the 1940s. In addition, they were appointed as Fellows of the 
Royal Entomological Society of England. The Urquhart Butterfly Garden
http://www.learner.org/jnorth/1997/jn-talk/0134.html
is a three acre park designed to attract butterflies in recognition of the 
contributions of Fred and Nora Urquhart in Dundas, Ontario to our knowledge of 
butterflies.
The two books authored by Fred Urquhart that are familiar to most of us are:
Urquhart, Fred. 1960. The Monarch Butterfly. University of Toronto Press. 
Toronto, Canada.
Urquhart, Fred A. 1987. The Monarch Butterfly: International Traveler. 
University of Toronto Press. Toronto, Canada.
For additional background on Fred Urquhart and the discovery of the monarch 
overwintering sites in Mexico see:
http://www.uuottawa.com/urquhart_fred.htm
Flight of the Monarchs. Vanity Fair, November 1999.
http://www.dispatchesfromthevanishingworld.com/pastdispatches/monarch/monarch1.html
http://home.satx.rr.com/txento/Brugger.htm
http://www.learner.org/jnorth/tm/monarch/DiscoveryTale.html
1998 Monarch Watch Season Summary, pages 24-25
http://www.monarchWatch.org/read/seasum.htm
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9) 2003 Membership/Tagging Kits
Now's the time to place an order for your annual Monarch Watch Membership and 
extra tags! Remember, there are only a fixed number of tags available each year 
and recently we have been running out of tags later in the season – to make sure 
you receive all of the tags that you’ll need for the fall place your order 
early. 2003 Memberships will include 25 tags, the premigration newsletter, the 
2003 Season Summary (mailed summer 2004) and one or two additional mailings. 
Orders may be placed online via Gulliver’s Gift Shop at
http://Shop.MonarchWatch.org
and offline orders may be called, faxed, or mailed to:
MonarchWatch@HomeEarth.com
3515 Silverside Road, Suite 203
Wilmington, DE 19810
toll-free phone - (800) 780-9986
toll-free fax - (877) 687-4878
For your convenience, an abbreviated order form is available at
http://www.MonarchWatch.org/order
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10) 2002 Tag Recoveries - Coming Soon!
Sarah continues to compile the 2002 season recovery data and hopes to have the 
complete records ready in the next few weeks. We will post the recovery data 
online as soon as we can. Thank you for your patience!
Domestic recovery records for the 2002 tagging season are currently online at
http://www.monarchwatch.org/tagmig/2002_recoveries.html
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