Monarch surveys

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Kent McFarland

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Aug 7, 2023, 11:50:17 AM8/7/23
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The annual Vermont Monarch Monitoring Blitz is back for a 7th edition! From July 28 to August 13, 2023, join the blitz to help us get a snapshot of Monarch populations in Vermont before migration.

Mission Monarch is a community science program to gather data on Monarch and Milkweed distribution and abundance each year during the breeding season. Participants find milkweed, look for Monarchs (eggs, larvae, and adults) and share their observations with us on the Mission Monarch website. It allows us to get an annual snapshot of how Monarchs are faring in Vermont and beyond.

Participation is simple! Just complete one or more missions during the Blitz between July 28 through August 13 and add your observations to Mission Monarch. Conducting a mission is easy and fun! From backyards to mountain meadows, all you need is a place where milkweed is growing. 

What is a mission?
Conducting a mission and participating in Mission Monarch is simple and fun! To conduct a mission, just follow the following steps:

  1. Find milkweed - Go outside and look for milkweed. It can be wild as well as cultivated milkweed. To learn how to recognize milkweed and know where to find it, click here.
  2. Search for monarchs - Carefully examine milkweed plants, looking for monarch eggs and caterpillars. They can be on or under leaves, in flowers or on fruits. It is important to look everywhere! Note the number milkweed stems you examined. It can be just one stem or a hundred; it’s up to you! Count the number of eggs, caterpillars, chrysalis and adults you find. Even if you find none, please report it.
  3. Write down your observations - Count and write down the number milkweed stems you examine. You may count only one stem or a hundred; it’s up to you! Write down the number of caterpillars you find. If several species of milkweed are growing at the location of your survey, count the stems and associated caterpillars separately. Even if you find no monarchs, please reporting it.
  4. Back home, go to Mission Monarch and submit your data.

Join and learn more about the mission at the Vermont Atlas of Life website.

____________________________

Kent McFarland (he/him)
Vermont Center for Ecostudies
PO Box 420 | Norwich, Vermont 05055

  

    


joan waltermire

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Aug 11, 2023, 8:30:19 AM8/11/23
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Hi Kent,
can't do the monarch survey during time slot, so not useful scinetifacally, BUT so far at our house in Vershire, 05079, where we have lots of milkweed and used to have many monarchs,, we saw one butterfly early in summer, alas no date, but none since. And just one small monarch caterpillar a few weeks ago. Depressing.
Joan Waltermire

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Alan C Graham

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Aug 11, 2023, 9:11:28 AM8/11/23
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Hi Kent,
I recorded some observations last week but have not had time to record them online.  No evidence of any monarc  I am headed to Camp Exclamation Point today and will not have time to upload the data until I get back.  No evidence of marIf there is a sizable 

On Aug 11, 2023, at 8:30 AM, joan waltermire <joan.wa...@gmail.com> wrote:


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