Mariposa Monarca Biosphere Reserve

Mariposa Monarca

The Purépecha grandmothers tell how their ancestors walked from the cold lands at the centre of the country. When the children and old people could go no further, they covered their bodies with the orange resin of the trees and the yellow pollen of the flowers to keep themselves warm. The pollen and resin transformed them into monarch butterflies, and they flew together to the lands of the Monarch Butterfly Biosphere Reserve.

Every year, the Monarch Butterfly Biosphere Reserve hosts millions of monarch butterflies every year, which after migrating 50,000 km southwards from Canada and the United States, arrive in the oyamel forests of the states of Mexico and Michoacán. Lynx, the Aztec blackbird and the brook salamander also benefit from the conservation of this important area in which local communities and Indigenous peoples actively participate.

Located in the rugged and forested mountains in the states of Michoacán and Mexico, about 100 km northwest of Mexico City, the biosphere reserve covers an area of 56,259 ha of temperate pine, oyamel and oak forests. It is also an important rainwater catchment area and a strategic point for the conservation of the country’s biodiversity, due to its high degree of endemism.

Mariposa Monarca Biosphere Reserve
0.5 grammes

Each monarch butterfly weighs 0.5 grammes and flaps its wings between 300 and 720 times per minute. This enables it to cover 75–130 km per day during the eight-month migration.

3,000 m altitude

This is the altitude at which the forests of oyamel, fir, pine and cedar trees that provide refuge for the monarch butterflies grow in the mountains of the biosphere reserve.

4,200 kilometres

Monarch butterflies travel each autumn from Canada and the United States – where they breed – and arrive in Mexico to hibernate. This extraordinary migration is the most evolved of all known insect species.

Aproximately 27,000 people

live in the Monarch Butterfly Biosphere Reserve, developing productive agroforestry activities, handicraft production and ecotourism, among other activities.

The queen of the forest

Every year from November to March, millions of Monarch butterflies (Danaus plexippus) gather in small areas of the reserve, turning the landscape orange. In 2008, the forest was designated a UNESCO World Heritage Site.

Mariposa Monarca Biosphere Reserve

Milkweed

The larvae of Monarch butterflies feed on an herb known as milkweed, poisonweed or Asclepia, which has toxic and medicinal properties. The butterflies are able to assimilate the poisons and store them in their exocuticle (insect skin), in order to defend themselves from predators.

Mariposa Monarca Biosphere Reserve

"The harvester”

The Monarch butterfly forms part of local history and the collective memory and cosmovision of the native peoples. The Purépechas consider it the soul of the dead and its arrival coincides with the traditional “Day of the Dead”, on 2 November. 

The Mazahua and Otomi refer to the Monarch butterfly as “The Harvester” because of it arrives as the land is prepared and cultivated for sowing.

Mariposa Monarca Biosphere Reserve

Migration

The Monarch butterfly breeds east of the mountains of southern Canada and much of the United States. The Methuselah generation then travels to central Mexico. The return journey occurs in early spring and takes four generations of butterflies to complete. This migration includes more than 90% of the North American Monarch butterfly population

Mariposa Monarca Biosphere Reserve

Queen Elizabeth II

In 1988, Queen Elizabeth and Prince Philip visited the region, which heightened the visibility of the migratory phenomenon and the importance of its conservation.

Mariposa Monarca Biosphere Reserve

More than 150,000 visitors a year

visit the Monarch butterfly colonies. In the Monarch Butterfly Protected Natural Area, there are five sanctuaries open to the public: Cerro Altamirano, Sierra Chincua, Sierra el Campanario, Cerros Chivatí-Huacal and Cerro Pelón.

Mariposa Monarca Biosphere Reserve