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Iowa Monarch Conservation Strategy

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The Iowa Monarch Conservation Strategy identifies the information and resources needed to  sustain and advance monarch butterfly conservation efforts in Iowa.  The eastern monarch butterfly (Danaus plexippus) population has experienced an 80% decline  over the past two decades. Causes for the population decline include loss of milkweed habitat in  the spring and summer breeding ranges of the United States, loss of overwintering habitat in  Mexico, and extreme weather events.  Iowa is in the center of the monarch’s summer breeding range, and roughly 40% of all monarch  butterflies that overwinter in Mexico are estimated to come from Iowa and neighboring states in  the Midwest. Since monarch caterpillars need milkweed to survive, one of the primary goals of  conservation efforts is to establish milkweed as part of healthy natural ecosystems. Expanding  monarch habitat in Iowa will play a major role in the recovery of the species. The strategy will guide the development, implementation and documentation of a voluntary,  statewide conservation effort based on the best available science. The strategy includes  information about the monarch butterfly, including a summary of its history, its population  distribution, and its dependence on milkweed and other native plants; Iowa’s current habitat  availability and habitat goal; and the types of conservation measures needed to support recovery of  the population. The strategy also provides a roadmap for supporting the conservation effort  through administration, information management, monitoring, and research and outreach. As  conservation efforts progress, mechanisms will be in place to distribute information so successes  are replicated throughout Iowa and beyond.

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