Record low numbers of overwintering Monarchs in Mexico

This past December (2013) the overwintering Monarch butterflies covered only 1.65 acres of forest in Mexico, compared to 7.14 acres in 2011. This is a record low since the monitoring of the overwintering colony began in 1993, which covered a record 45 acres in 1996. The steep decline in the population size over the last decade is due to both unusual weather events that impede migration & reproduction, as well as declining availability of the milkweed host plant due to increased herbicide use in the midwest.

Read more from the New York Times.