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Milkweed Gardens Support Declining Monarchs

Author: Field Museum
Published: 2024/07/30 - Updated: 2025/12/21
Publication Details: Peer-Reviewed, Instructive / Helpful
Category Topic: Hobbies - Related Publications

Page Content: Synopsis - Introduction - Main - Insights, Updates

Synopsis: This peer-reviewed research demonstrates that small-scale milkweed plantings in urban gardens can meaningfully contribute to monarch butterfly conservation. Led by Field Museum scientists and conducted through community science, the study found that monarchs readily locate and use milkweed in yards, alleys, and balcony planters across Chicagoland, with established plants and diverse flowering companions attracting the most egg-laying activity. The research is particularly valuable for people with limited mobility or disabilities seeking accessible ways to participate in conservation, as container gardening on decks and patios proves just as effective for supporting these migratory insects as traditional ground gardens. Unlike many conservation projects requiring extensive land access or specialized knowledge, this work shows that anyone with a planter and basic monitoring skills can help address the monarch population decline caused by agricultural pesticide use and habitat destruction in the Midwest - Disabled World (DW).

Definition: Monarch Butterfly

The monarch butterfly (Danaus plexippus), or Milkweed butterfly, is a large, migratory butterfly native to North America, renowned for its striking orange wings with black veins and white spots. It belongs to the family Nymphalidae and is famous for its extraordinary annual migration, traveling thousands of miles from the United States and Canada to central Mexico and coastal California for the winter. Monarchs are dependent on milkweed plants for laying eggs and feeding their larvae. This species exhibits sexual dimorphism, with males having distinctive black spots on their hindwings. Despite being one of the most recognizable butterflies, monarch populations are threatened by habitat loss, climate change, and declining milkweed availability, leading to significant conservation efforts to protect their migratory routes and breeding grounds

Introduction

Characteristics of Urban Milkweed Gardens that Influence Monarch Butterfly Egg Abundance

Monarch butterflies, with their striking orange and black wings, are some of the most recognizable butterflies in North America. But they're in trouble. Monarch caterpillars can only eat the leaves of milkweed, a native wildflower. As milkweed has disappeared, so have the monarchs, to the point that they're at risk of extinction.

Main Content

Research shows that planting milkweed in home gardens can add significant monarch habitat to the landscape. In a new study in the journal Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution, researchers and community scientists monitored urban milkweed plants for butterfly eggs to learn what makes these city gardens more hospitable to monarchs. They found that even tiny city gardens attracted monarchs and became a home to caterpillars.

Monarch caterpillar on a milkweed plant.
Monarch caterpillar on a milkweed plant - Image Credit: Karen Klinger.

"In this study, we found that monarchs can find the milkweed, wherever the milkweed is, even if it's in planters on balconies and rooftops," says Karen Klinger, a Geographic Information Systems analyst in the Keller Science Action Center at the Field Museum and the study's lead author. "Milkweed gardens can be in all shapes and sizes, and any milkweed garden can contribute habitat for monarchs."

Monarch butterflies have one of the most unusual and demanding migration patterns of any insect. The eastern population of monarchs starts the year in Mexico, and they move up across North America in the spring and summer.

Monarch butterfly on a milkweed flower.
Monarch butterfly on a milkweed flower - Image Credit: Mark and Michelle Rogovin

"As they travel, they lay their eggs, and when those adults die, the next generation continues the migration northward. They will make it all the way to southern Canada, and at the end of summer, a new super generation is born that migrates all the way south and survives through the winter," says Klinger.

Monarch eggs on a milkweed plant.
Monarch eggs on a milkweed plant - Image Credit: Ursula Alvarado-Miller.

Since it takes multiple generations of milkweed-eating caterpillars to get the monarch population from Mexico to Canada each year, the monarchs rely on milkweed plants throughout their migration path.

"There used to be wild milkweed growing along farmland in the Midwest, but now farmers use pesticides that kill the milkweed. As a result, a lot of the habitat for monarchs in the Midwest has disappeared," says Klinger.

Monarch populations have declined along with the disappearance of milkweed; in recent years, they've been a candidate for endangered species status by the International Union for Conservation of Nature and the US Fish and Wildlife Service.

Milkweed garden in an alley behind a garage.
Milkweed garden in an alley behind a garage - Image Credit: Imena Valdes.

"If we don't do anything soon, monarchs are going to be in serious trouble," says Aster Hasle, a lead conservation ecologist at the Field Museum's Keller Science Action Center and a co-author of the paper.

Since so much of the rural milkweed that monarchs used to rely on has disappeared, scientists have wondered if milkweed gardens in urban areas might be able to bridge the gap.

"There was a call for all hands on deck, to plant milkweed across all sectors of the landscape, but people discounted urban areas, because if you look at some mapping of urban areas, it looks like it's completely developed, with no availability for milkweed plants," says Klinger.

Klinger was a co-author of a 2019 study led by Field Museum scientists that showed that even "concrete jungles" have room for milkweed plants, in people's yards, alleyways, and rooftops.

The new study led by Klinger is a follow-up to this earlier work.

"With our 2019 study, we found that a lot of the spaces where milkweed could grow was inaccessible to scientists-- we couldn't go into people's backyards, and look at their milkweed, so there was a lot of milkweed that we can't account for," says Klinger. "But we also found that there was a lot of enthusiasm among residents to plant milkweed and support monarchs. So based on that, we did a community science project that became the basis of this new paper."

Klinger and Hasle worked with volunteers around Chicagoland to monitor milkweed plants in their yards and neighborhoods for monarch butterflies laying their eggs on the plants and caterpillars eating the milkweed leaves.

"We wanted to answer the question of, how well do these urban milkweed gardens actually support monarch butterflies? Everybody always wants to know, what should I plant? What species of milkweed, how many plants, how big of a garden? There are so many questions to answer, so we were hoping that we could use this project and the data from it to start answering those questions."

Klinger and Hasle trained over 400 community scientist volunteers on how to monitor their milkweed for monarch eggs and caterpillars, which they reported back to the researchers. Over the course of four years, the team collected 5,905 observations of monarch activity on 810 patches of milkweed in Chicagoland. This paper analyzed a portion of this data from 2020-2022.

"We encouraged participants who had planters on balconies, who had planters on rooftop decks, and we saw some of the most amazing things," says Klinger. "There was one participant who had a planter set on the condominium roof that had five large caterpillars in one photo."

Based on these observations, the researchers found several overarching trends about what makes for a successful milkweed garden.

"There are several native species of milkweed, and we found that common milkweed was very prevalent in people's gardens and was really key, both in terms of whether monarchs laid their eggs there, and how many they laid," says Klinger. "Also, kind of surprisingly, that older, more established milkweed plants did a lot better, they were more likely to see eggs than younger plants."

In addition, having a variety of blooming plants was also key for monarchs to lay more eggs on milkweed, as it provided lots of nectar for the adults.

However, while a garden with lots of native milkweed and other flowering plants left to grow year after year might be the best way to help monarchs, the researchers noted that every little bit helps.

"Plant the species that works the best for you and your garden," says Klinger.

As of July 24, 2024, Illinois Governor JB Pritzker signed into law the Mobilizing Our Neighborhoods to Adopt Resilient Conservation Habitats (MONARCH) Act, which restricts HOAs from prohibiting native plantings and provides financial and technical assistance for establishing native and pollinator-friendly gardens.

While monarchs are just one small species of insect, they're indicative of the big-picture health of the ecosystems they live in.

"Because they cross this big landscape from Mexico to Canada, monarchs are an important indicator of what's happening across a big area," says Hasle. "Monarchs need a lot of the things that other insects need, like blooming flowers, so what's good for monarchs is good for other pollinators too. And we're in the midst of a global insect decline, so it's important to help."

Insights, Analysis, and Developments

Editorial Note: The monarch's plight reflects a larger ecological crisis - the steady erasure of habitat across North America - yet this research offers something uncommon in conservation literature: genuine optimism grounded in data. By enlisting over 400 community volunteers to track nearly 6,000 observations of monarch activity, the researchers didn't just gather information; they demonstrated that citizens, regardless of physical ability or access to land, hold real power to reverse species decline. In an era when environmental news often amplifies despair, the sight of five monarch caterpillars thriving in a rooftop planter reminds us that habitat restoration isn't some distant specialist's work - it happens in the spaces we inhabit every day - Disabled World (DW).

Attribution/Source(s): This peer reviewed publication was selected for publishing by the editors of Disabled World (DW) due to its relevance to the disability community. Originally authored by Field Museum and published on 2024/07/30, this content may have been edited for style, clarity, or brevity.

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APA: Field Museum. (2024, July 30 - Last revised: 2025, December 21). Milkweed Gardens Support Declining Monarchs. Disabled World (DW). Retrieved January 30, 2026 from www.disabled-world.com/entertainment/hobby/monarch-butterflies.php
MLA: Field Museum. "Milkweed Gardens Support Declining Monarchs." Disabled World (DW), 30 Jul. 2024, revised 21 Dec. 2025. Web. 30 Jan. 2026. <www.disabled-world.com/entertainment/hobby/monarch-butterflies.php>.
Chicago: Field Museum. "Milkweed Gardens Support Declining Monarchs." Disabled World (DW). Last modified December 21, 2025. www.disabled-world.com/entertainment/hobby/monarch-butterflies.php.

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