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πŸ¦‹ Butterfly Species Guide

Monarch Butterfly

Danaus plexippus

⚠ Threatened ↕ Migratory Native to North America
Wingspan
3.5 – 4.5 inches
Flight Season
Mar – Nov (varies by region)
Host Plant
Milkweed (Asclepias spp.) only
Overwinters
Mexico (east); California (west)
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Identification

The Monarch is one of North America’s most recognizable butterflies β€” bright orange wings laced with black veins, bordered in black with white spots. The pattern is distinctive enough that misidentification is rare, though the Viceroy is a common lookalike.

βœ… Monarch

  • Solid orange with black veins
  • No horizontal band across hindwing
  • Larger wingspan (3.5–4.5″)
  • Glides frequently while flying
  • Males have black spot on hindwing vein

⚠ Viceroy (Lookalike)

  • Similar orange coloring
  • Black line crosses hindwing
  • Slightly smaller wingspan
  • Faster, more erratic flight
  • Often near willows and poplars

Migration

The Monarch migration is one of the natural world’s most extraordinary phenomena. The eastern population travels up to 3,000 miles between North America and their overwintering grounds in the oyamel fir forests of MichoacΓ‘n, Mexico. No individual butterfly makes the full round trip β€” it takes 3 to 4 generations to complete the journey north, and a single long-lived “Methuselah” generation to return south in fall.

Mar – AprOverwintering adults depart Mexico; first generation breeds on early milkweed in Texas and the Gulf Coast
May – JunSecond generation moves north through the Midwest; peak egg-laying on milkweed begins
Jul – AugThird generation spreads across the northern breeding range; population builds
Sep – OctThe Methuselah generation emerges; southward migration begins; peak migration through Texas Oct 1–15
Nov – FebOverwintering in oyamel fir forests in MichoacΓ‘n, Mexico

Host Plants & Nectar Plants

Monarchs are entirely dependent on milkweed for breeding. Females will only lay eggs on milkweed, and caterpillars eat nothing else. The decline of milkweed across the North American landscape β€” due to agricultural herbicide use and habitat loss β€” is the primary driver of population decline.

🌱
Common Milkweed
Asclepias syriaca
Host Plant
🌱
Butterfly Weed
Asclepias tuberosa
Host Plant
🌱
Swamp Milkweed
Asclepias incarnata
Host Plant
🌸
Purple Coneflower
Echinacea purpurea
Nectar Plant
🌸
Goldenrod
Solidago spp.
Nectar Plant
🌸
Zinnia
Zinnia elegans
Nectar Plant

⚠ Conservation Note

The eastern Monarch population has declined by more than 80% since the 1990s. Planting native milkweed β€” particularly species native to your region β€” is the single most effective thing a home gardener can do. Avoid tropical milkweed (Asclepias curassavica) in warm climates; it does not die back in winter and may interfere with migration cues.

Member Photos

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See all Monarch photos in the gallery β†’