Butterflies Declined by 22% in Just 2 Decades Across the US – There are Ways You Can Help Save Them

A study published in 2024 found that a change in insecticide use was a major factor in driving butterfly declines in the Midwest over 17 years.
A study published in 2024 found that a change in insecticide use was a major factor in driving butterfly declines in the Midwest over 17 years.
Share
A study published in 2024 found that a change in insecticide use was a major factor in driving butterfly declines in the Midwest over 17 years.
A study published in 2024 found that a change in insecticide use was a major factor in driving butterfly declines in the Midwest over 17 years.
Butterflies Declined by 22% in Just 2 Decades Across the US – There are Ways You Can Help Save Them
Copy

If the joy of seeing butterflies seems increasingly rare these days, it isn’t your imagination.

From 2000 to 2020, the number of butterflies fell by 22% across the continental United States. That’s 1 in 5 butterflies lost. The findings are from an analysis just published in the journal Science by the U.S. Geological Survey’s Powell Center Status of Butterflies of the United States Working Group, which I am involved in.

We found declines in just about every region of the continental U.S. and across almost all butterfly species.

Overall, nearly one-third of the 342 butterfly species we were able to study declined by more than half. Twenty-two species fell by more than 90%. Only nine actually increased in numbers.

Read more on the Conversation.

The nonprofit will receive $3.1 million from the state to manage the site
Landlord group objects as public database, designed to track lead safety, categorizes homes without owner consent; state health department pledges adjustments
Last fall, in the wake of a U.S. Supreme Court decision, West Warwick passed an ordinance banning camping on public property. Advocates say dozens of people have been displaced
Gathering at teachers’ union headquarters aims to shape narrative amid fears Rhode Island could lose millions in education aid
“When you think of Jim Crow, you might think of somewhere else in the country, but unfortunately, discrimination was alive and well in New England just as much throughout all those years”
The Trump Administration will be able to nominate a successor