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Puerto Vallarta News NetworkNews Around the Republic of Mexico | August 2005 

Crew to Track Monarch Butterflies
email this pageprint this pageemail usWill Weissert - Associated Press Writer


Pilot in tiny plane aims to follow butterflies on trek from Canada to Mexico. For more info about the Monarch butterfly migration, click HERE.
Mexico City – There are thousands of miles ahead and room for only two in the oversized hang-glider with a minuscule motor tacked on the bottom.

But the crew won't be flying alone: Its ultra-light plane will follow millions of Monarch butterflies during every part of their winter migration from the forests of eastern Canada to the central Mexican mountains.

Mexican pilot Francisco "Vico" Gutierrez and a crew including other pilots from Canada, the United States and this country, plan to leave Quebec on Aug. 15 and follow that migration.

The route will take them to Montreal and Toronto in Canada and south across the United States with stops at Niagara Falls, New York; New York City; Washington; Lawrence, Kansas; Oklahoma City; Austin, Texas; and Eagle Pass, on the Mexican border.

The trip is scheduled to come to an end on Nov. 2, in Valle Del Bravo, close to the forests where the butterflies winter in Michoacan state. It is sponsored by the World Wildlife Federation of Mexico, the government of Michoacan and Gutierrez himself.

The annual arrival of Monarch butterflies from across North America to Mexico – where they winter from October to late March – is an aesthetic and scientific wonder.

But illegal logging continues to thin and topple the fir forests west of Mexico City that protect butterflies from the rain and cold. Gutierrez said he hopes the flight will raise awareness about the need to better-conserve the Monarchs' fragile habitats.

Its wings painted with giant versions of the orange, black and white wings of the Monarch butterfly, the aircraft is equipped with just an 80-horsepower engine. But that's more than enough to keep up with the butterflies, who travel between 60 and 95 miles (100 and 150 kilometers) daily at average speeds of about 12 mph (20 kph) before landing to rest, Gutierrez said.

He plans to pilot the plane about five times faster than the rate of the butterflies, but only travel the daily distances they travel.

The journey should produce a documentary, and a photographer or cameraman will accompany Gutierrez or other pilots onboard, while the rest of the team follows along in a van.

The project is dubbed Papalotzin, a word from the ancient Nahuatl language spoken by the Aztecs which roughly translates to small butterfly. In all, Gutierrez expects to travel 3,415 miles (5,500 kilometers), using about 205 gallons (780 liters) of gasoline along the way.

Carlos Galindo, forest director for the World Wildlife Fund in Mexico, said no one had followed the butterflies via air for all of their transcontinental journey. Doing so can teach scientists how they cope with changing wind patterns, temperature shifts and difficult weather, he said.

It is also unclear, for instance, at what altitude the butterflies cruise and why those migrating have a life span of eight months while generations that come before and after the trip live only about a month, he said.

But "the object of this trip is not a scientific one, it's a trip aimed to increase awareness," Galindo said.

Watching as crew members assembled the 34-foot (10.5-meter) by 8-foot (2.5-meter) plane for journalists in a crowded but peaceful park in the Mexican capital, Gutierrez said "I'm actually really nervous."

"No, that's not true," he was quick to add as the 400-pound (180-kilogram) plane began to take shape, in a process that resembled campers erecting a tent. "I'm really content, really excited."



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