Monarch Butterfly
The Flying Flower with a Passport
What is it?
Monarch Butterfly
The Flying Flower with a Passport
What is it?

What Is It?

The monarch butterfly is a bright orange-and-black insect that’s easy to spot fluttering through gardens and fields. It’s best known for its amazing migration that covers thousands of miles each year.

Where Does It Live?

Monarchs live across North America, from Canada to Mexico. You’ll find them in open areas with flowers and milkweed—like meadows, fields, parks, and even sunny backyard gardens.

What Does It Do?

Monarchs fly from flower to flower, drinking sweet nectar and spreading pollen. They also lay their eggs only on milkweed plants, which their baby caterpillars need to grow and survive.

How Does It Reproduce?

Monarchs lay their eggs on milkweed plants. After hatching, caterpillars eat milkweed, turn into a chrysalis, and finally become butterflies. It’s nature’s version of a magical costume change.

What’s the Problem?

Pesticides, climate change, and habitat loss are making it hard for monarchs to find food and places to lay eggs. Their populations are shrinking fast and need help to recover.

Fun Facts

    Monarchs migrate over 2,000 miles without a map. Their bright colors warn predators they taste bad. And even though they’re small, they’re tough enough to cross entire countries.

    Why Should We Care?

    Monarchs pollinate plants and help nature grow. When they start disappearing, it’s a sign that the environment is in trouble—and that means problems for people, too.

    Meet Other SPECIES

    A scrappy, skinny pine that grows where others give up—like the ultimate underdog....
    The mule deer (Odocoileus hemionus) is a deer indigenous to western North America; it is named for its ears, which...
    A tall, stunning pine with cinnamon-brown bark that smells like butterscotch. (Yes, seriously—sniff it!)...
    An aromatic conifer that smells like a forest spa and was once the go-to for making pencils....

    help protect gateway park species