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by Tony Gomez

3 years ago

Raising Book Resources

Raising Hope for the 2020 Migration- Raise the Migration Results


Share Your Raise The Migration 2020 Experience in a Comment Below

3 years ago

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By Tony Gomez

Raise the Migration 2020- Share Your Raising Butterflies Experience

by Tony Gomez

3 years ago

Raise The Migration is an annual North American challenge to raise monarch butterflies to release for fallโ€™s annual monarch migration. The time has come to share your 2020 experience and raise it forwardโ€ฆ

Raise the Migration 2020- Share Your Raising Monarch Butterflies Experience

The raising season is coming to an end, so weโ€™d love to hear how many butterflies you released for fallโ€™s annual 2020 monarch migrationโ€ฆand more importantly, what lessons youโ€™ve learned through this amazing raising experience?

If youโ€™ve still got some raising to do, raise on! But please post in the comment box at the bottom of this page after youโ€™ve released your last butterfly.

Every year, I start Raise The Migration in early August, but monarchs raised at that time arenโ€™t actually migration generation butterfliesโ€ฆtheyโ€™re actually the parents to that amazing generation of travelers.

Thereโ€™s no way to tell whether butterflies will mate or migrate, but one telltale sign of a migration generation butterfly is its size, which is dependent on how much the caterpillar eats. The first super-sized caterpillars start to form chrysalides around the first week of September in our northern regionโ€ฆ

In the garden, you can tell non-migratory butterflies by their worn out wings. Non-migratory males are also more aggressive, chasing off potential competition while seeking out female companionshipโ€ฆmigratory monarchs are in sexual diapause and only interested in stocking up on nectar for the long journey ahead.

So how did our Raise The Migration Monarchs fare this season and what lessons did we learn raising forward?

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If youโ€™re interested in a step-by-step guide digital guide with free updates (before each monarch season begins in spring) please check out the monarch raising guide by clicking this butterfly photo:

Raising Monarch Butterflies Book

For anyone who purchases the guide (or any other item) from Monarch Butterfly Life, you will be invited to our closed facebook group where you can discuss raising monarchs with other raisers and post your photos.

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Here are Raise the Migration results from the past seven seasons:

2019- 81% survival rate

2018- 93% survival rate

2017- 100% survival rate

2016- 96% survial rate

2015- 96% survival rate

2014- 90% survival rate

2013- 100% survival rate

As you can see from the results, this raising system is consistently producing healthy monarchs to help support the struggling monarch population.


Raise The Migration 2020 Results

I am counting our 2020 migration generation as all butterflies that eclosed September 1st and after.


Caterpillar Escapes

Since using food container hatcheries for eggs and baby caterpillars, this has helped us to easily keep track of the wee cats until they can be placed in the larger mesh cages. We have not lost a caterpillar for years...


Unexplained Caterpillar Deaths

None to report in 2020


Caterpillar Diseases and Parasites?

There were no caterpillar disease issues to report in 2020. Check out a pre and post molt of one caterpillar graduating from instar 3 to instar 4:

A Monarch Caterpillar is about to molt with protruding face cap
BEFORE
A Monarch Caterpillar After Shedding its skin and face cap
AFTER

Accidental Deaths?

There have been two accidental deaths this year...seems fitting for 2020. ๐Ÿ™ƒ

1. This was an odd fluke that happened in an egg hatchery. There was one container with two eggs that looked like they might have fungus issues from the leaves I found them on.

After monitoring, I thought one of the eggs had succumbed to a rust-like fungus that was growing around it. Little did I know, the caterpillar had hatched and crawled under the paper towel that lined the hatchery....there was even a fresh milkweed leaf under the fungusy leaf piece.

This has never happened before so I was shocked to find the dead baby cat as I cleared out the hatchery.

2. On a cold morning in the 3-season porch (low was 40ยฐ F), I picked up the floral tube/racks (with milkweed and caterpillars) and walked it into the kitchen without using the boot tray. Two of the cold, lethargic caterpillars fell to the floor. I rescued one...and stepped on the other. ๐Ÿ˜”

Chrysalis Problems

Chrysalis formation was perfect this season. I conducted 6 removing/rehanging experiments this year: 3 chrysalides hung up with pins, 2 hung up on a microfiber cloth, and 1 taped to the floor:

6 Monarch Chrysalides Rehung- Raise The Migration Experiment

All 6 butterflies eclosed with no issues and the butterflies were released to join the 2020 monarch migration. The last male emerged Sunday October 11th, and was released on Monday October 12th:

6 Monarch Chrysalides Rehung- Raise The Migration Results

Butterfly Eclosures

All butterflies emerged from their monarch chrysalises without issue.

Final Results

2 accidental deaths

0 disease or parasite issues

0 unexplained death

4 healthy males

5 healthy females

82% survival rate


Lessons Learned?

Of the two caterpillar accidents that occurred this season, one was a fluke that will likely never happen again.

However, the 'stepping' accident could have been easily avoided if I would have just followed my own advice for caterpillar safety. If moving caterpillars outside of the cage, place them on a boot tray so they will never fall on the floor.

I also learned that keeping chrysalides in the 3 season porch at night (during the fall) is a bad idea for our northern region. Cool night time temps slowed down metamorphosis by at least a week, meaning the excellent window I had to release butterflies in warm weather, quickly shrunk to just a few days.

The chrysalises get plenty of exposure to natural lighting and temperatures during the day through open windows. If these monarchs would have been left to fend for themselves outside, their wintry fate would have been sealed...๐Ÿฅถ

Also, my preferred way of rehanging chrysalides is pinning the silk to the top of the cage. Really though, all 3 methods work well, so do what you're most comfortable with when you need to rehang a chrysalis.


August 2020 Migration Memory

And now, hereโ€™s the part Iโ€™m most excited aboutโ€ฆhearing about all the valuable lessons you learned raising monarchs over the past few weeks!

Share Your Results?!

Please share your results below by letting us know how many monarchs you released to help boost the struggling monarch populationโ€ฆremember to include your location.

More importantly, please share the most valuable lesson(s) you learned about raising monarch butterflies, that you believe can help others raising forward.

Thank you for helping to Raise the Migration in 2020

348 comments


  • Released 366 Monarchs lost 16 raised in outside screen house in Monarch Butterfly Garden cubes. Winnipeg Canada

    HElen on

  • We are located in Essex County, Ontario and this was our first year with a late start. 35 were released. All were raised from eggs found in my yard on our milkweed plants. Only had 1 with a wrinkled wing that survived only 2 days. He formed his chrysalis laying on his side on a leaf.
    We used sour cream containers with water in them and cutting small โ€œXโ€™sโ€ in the lid to set in stalks of milkweed. For our cages we used clear plastic containers 18โ€ x 12โ€™ x 12โ€ with lids, balanced on their sides, so removing the lid from the side instead of the top allowed cleaning and feeding even when there were young chrysalises hanging from the top.
    We cut out ยพ of the side (top) and applied screening with hot melt glue.
    First butterflies were released mid July and the last four were released in the last week of August. I didnโ€™t have much milkweed in our yard so collected it from the side of the roads in the county. I washed it to remove any aphids or dirt and debris, then removed the leaves from the stems and stored bunches of leaves in Ziplock bags in the fridge. They were good for over a week that way and I could keep up with the caterpillarsโ€™ healthy appetites without worrying we would run out of fresh leaves.

    Susanne on

  • Raised and released 63 butterflies, 32 males, 31 females

    Janet Peck on

  • This is my 3rd year raising Monarchs here in Northern Indiana. It was later in the season that I began to see some caterpillars. I raised about 30 monarch and 20 swallowtail. My milkweed this year seemed unhealthy and my swamp milkweed was almost lost to aphids. I did however have a very interesting discovery. I found over a dozen very big happy monarch caterpillars munching on a strange vine at my dads house. I couldnโ€™t identify it until someone responded from the raise the migration site telling me it was honey-vine milkweed. I brought half the caterpillars home and left the rest. All did well. Some of the later caterpillars that I collected from eggs on my milkweed did not do so well. They were ones from when the nights got cooler. I had several babies die, one malformed at the chrysalis stage and two malformed butterflies. One I have been caring for as he lives his days out on the flowers and yet lifts his head twitches his antenna and pumps his wings. I still have many large swallowtail cats on my parsley and it is close to the house so Iโ€™m letting them do what nature does for now.

    Alison Howard Howard on

  • I live in SW Florida below Tampa Bay, so our season is year-round. January was huge and I released 66 healthy monarchs, but after that disease set in and I lost more than I released. Many, many caterpillars died before pupating, even though I raise quite a few from eggs or tiny cats. I probably lost 10% of the chrysalides. I wash absolutely every leaf and stem that is fed to the cats, so have to believe they are infected when born. I also bleach my two permanent cages several times a year. My next purchase will be a microscope. The total released in 2020 was 148.

    Marsha L Wikle on

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