Observing 40 million monarch butterflies take off from a Mexican forest in the early spring has a subtle, breathtaking quality. It’s not just gorgeous, as anyone who has stood at the edge of Michoacán’s oyamel fir groves during the departure season will attest. It’s a little overwhelming. The way the air moves is different. The light changes. And what those butterflies did next this year, for the first time in recorded history, has scientists genuinely searching for new words to describe it.
The eastern monarch population recorded a 64 percent increase in its 2025-26 winter survey, occupying 2.93 hectares of forest compared to just 1.79 hectares the previous winter. That translates, by widely accepted estimates, to more than 61 million butterflies. And within that surge in numbers, researchers began noticing something in the flight behavior and migratory timing that simply hadn’t appeared in decades of careful observation.
| Category | Details |
|---|---|
| Species Name | Monarch Butterfly (Danaus plexippus) |
| Population Type Studied | Eastern Monarch (migratory) |
| 2024–25 Winter Population (Forest Area) | 1.79 hectares (4.42 acres) |
| 2025–26 Winter Population (Forest Area) | 2.93 hectares (7.24 acres) |
| Population Increase | ~64% year-over-year |
| Estimated Butterfly Count | Over 61 million monarchs |
| Overwintering Location | Oyamel Fir Forests, Central Mexico |
| Conservation Status | Endangered (IUCN Red List) |
| Survey Conducted By | WWF-Mexico & Mexico’s National Commission of Protected Natural Areas |
| Peak Historical Population | ~45 acres of forest (1996–97 season) |
| Target for Long-Term Survival | Minimum 6 hectares (15 acres) of forest |
| Key Threats | Habitat loss, herbicide use, climate change, illegal logging |
| Reference Links | WWF Monarch Butterfly Conservation — Monarch Joint Venture |
The pattern — still being studied and documented — suggests that monarchs, under certain weather and habitat conditions, are capable of adjusting their migration in ways that conservationists hadn’t modeled or anticipated.
It’s worth pausing on that for a moment. This is an insect that has been watched, tracked, and studied obsessively since the 1970s. Scientists know what these butterflies eat, where they sleep, how many generations it takes to complete a full round trip from Mexico to Canada and back — four, typically. The idea that they could still surprise us this fundamentally says something not just about monarchs, but about how much the natural world continues to operate beyond the edge of our understanding.
The survey itself, conducted annually by WWF-Mexico and Mexico’s National Commission of Protected Natural Areas in partnership with local communities, has long served as the most reliable gauge of the eastern population’s health.
The director general of WWF Mexico, Jorge Rickards, urged governments, landowners, conservationists, and regular people to take an all-hands approach going forward in order to safeguard the migratory corridor that runs from Canada through the American Midwest and into the central Mexican forests. That’s a big request. However, in light of recent events, it seems more pressing and possibly more feasible than it has in years.
A large portion of the population increase in 2025 is being attributed by scientists to better weather along the migratory flyway. In the Upper Midwest, the summer of 2024 had been terrible, with heat, drought, and other conditions that kill off monarchs in their second and third generations before they have a chance to gain momentum and move south. Conditions eventually improved by the time the diminished population arrived in Mexico.
The flyway and the breeding grounds worked together this year for the first time in a number of seasons. It’s possible that the unusual migratory pattern that’s garnering so much attention can’t be explained by improved weather alone. However, it probably created the circumstances for it.
Here, the larger context is important. Since the 1980s, the population of Eastern monarchs has decreased by about 80%. The population of the western region, which includes people who live and migrate across the Rocky Mountains, has decreased by over 95%. The U.S. Endangered Species Act does not formally list either group; conservation organizations have long pushed to close this policy gap. Researchers are hesitant to celebrate when they see a species that has been on the verge of extinction for forty years suddenly show signs of both recovery and behavioral adaptation.
The new data is encouraging, but before anyone can call this a turnaround, monarchs need extensive habitat restoration across all land uses, from backyard gardens to expansive public tracts, according to Wendy Caldwell, executive director of Monarch Joint Venture.
At least in Mexico, there seems to be a real turning point in the conservation narrative. Since 2008, illegal logging in the Monarch Butterfly Biosphere Reserve’s core zone has all but disappeared. During the most recent reporting period, forest degradation in the core overwintering zone decreased by 10%.
The oyamel fir forests that these butterflies rely on to protect them from wind, rain, and the bitter cold that descends on those mountains at night are in better health than they were ten years ago. This is important because monarchs require more than just a destination. They must have a working one.
The precise implications of the recently discovered migration pattern for the long-term behavior of the species are still unknown. Is it a modification? A traditional response to climate disruption? Something motivated by Mexico’s years-long, covert partial habitat recovery?
It’s difficult to ignore the fact that nature frequently writes its own answers before we’ve finished formulating the questions. This spring, sixty-one million butterflies flew along a route that wasn’t exactly like anything in history. It’s important to pay close attention to what they have to say.

