Classroom lesson 路 Wildlife馃嚥馃嚱 Mexico

The monarch butterfly migration

Millions of butterflies fly all the way to Mexico every year

A monarch butterfly with bright orange and black wings open on a flower

Photo 路 Wikimedia Commons

What is it?

Every autumn, millions of monarch butterflies fly from Canada and the United States all the way to a small patch of forest in central Mexico. They travel up to 4,800 kilometres - about the distance from London to New York. It is one of the longest journeys made by any insect on Earth.

Tell me more

A monarch butterfly weighs less than a single paperclip. Yet it can fly for months, riding high winds and gliding for hours without flapping. They travel during the day and rest in trees at night, sometimes in huge clusters that bend the branches.

When they reach Mexico in November, the butterflies pile onto the same fir trees, year after year. There are so many that the forest turns orange. When the sun warms them up, they all flutter into the air at once - the sound is like soft rain.

Here is the really amazing part. The butterflies that fly to Mexico have never been there before. Their great-great-grandparents made the trip the year before. Somehow they still know exactly which trees to land on. Scientists are still figuring out how.

The journey back is shared by four generations of butterflies, each one flying part of the way north before laying eggs. The great-great-grandchildren of the ones who arrive in Mexico are the ones who fly back the next year. No single butterfly does the whole trip both ways.

In the classroom

Walk your class through this in 15 minutes.

Talk together

Discussion prompts

  1. 01How might a butterfly know which way to fly, with no map and no parent to follow?
  2. 02Why might it be safer for millions of butterflies to gather on the same trees?
  3. 03What other animals travel long distances every year? Why do you think they do it?
Try this

Classroom activity

On a world map, mark the monarch's journey from Canada to Mexico. Compare 4,800 km to journeys you know - how many trips between your school and the nearest big city would equal one monarch migration?