4d. anderson Corp press releaseSt. Croix Riverway launches effort to bring
back the monarchs
The Monarch Corridor project aims to restore all kinds of pollinators along the Scenic Riverway.
Tuesday, July 21, 2015
Star Tribune, Minneapolis, Minnesota
http://www. startribune. com/st-croix-riverway-launches-effort-to-bring-back-the-
monarchs/3161343 81 /
Colorful monarch butterflies have largely disappeared from the vast St. Croix River watershed,
but the National Park Service has launched an all-out effort to bring them back.
"The whole idea is to create a mosaic of pollinator -friendly habitat," said Chris Stein,
superintendent of the St. Croix National Scenic Riverway. "We're trying to make a difference in
this landscape of more than 800,000 square miles. We'd like to serve as a model for the rest of
the country, frankly. If we can do it in the St. Croix Valley, it can be done everywhere."
The regional "Monarch Corridor" initiative intended to harness participation from potentially
thousands of people — rides on the wings of a butterfly that has become a symbol of a
widespread loss of pollinator habitat. The monarch is just one of many pollinators such as bees,
beetles, bats and hummingbirds, but there's a belief that its fluttering grace stirs people to action
like no other pollinator.
"They're beautiful and people have a familiarity with them," said Jonathan Moore, the St. Croix
Riverway park ranger coordinating the project. "Monarchs are an incredibly charismatic and
iconic species."
Their numbers have dropped sharply in recent years, all but erasing them from the watershed that
feeds the St. Croix and its principal tributary, the Namekagon River in Wisconsin. They winter in
Mexico.
Improving habitat for monarchs will help all pollinators, Moore said, and raise public awareness
of the urgency of restoring milkweed and other forms of habitat.
`Monarch Corridor' project
Three federal agencies are working together on a "Monarch Corridor" project to restore habitat
for pollinators, including the monarch butterfly. The National Park Service, U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service and U.S. Forest Service will announce the initiative soon.
• Information about conservation efforts to save the monarch is available here:
www.fws.L),ov/midwest/monarch
• The nonprofit Pollinator Friendly Alliance, in Stillwater, has links that include advice on
finding pesticide -free plants: pollinatorfriendly.org/blog/
• An "ultimate grass roots party to bring back the pollinators" will be held Sept. 13 from 1-6
p.m. at Lift Bridge Brewery in Stillwater. All proceeds from the "18+" event will benefit
pollinator conservation.
"We're at a critical point that we need to do something to save it," he said.
What about pesticides?
The Monarch Corridor project doesn't delve into the sensitive national debate over pesticide use,
but instead is aimed at inspiring people to take action in their backyards, in city parks, or on
public land "to inspire tangible action.
Laurie Schneider of the Pollinator Friendly Alliance in Stillwater supports the Monarch Corridor
initiative and said the riverway is "a really smart geographic location in terms of drumming up
support" because so many like-minded people live along the river.
"Chris is very good at that," she said of Stein. "If anyone can pull it off, he can."
But she said any campaign to reverse the decline of pollinators must include education about
pesticides, especially a class of them known as neonicotinoids, which have been implicated in
the global decline of honeybees and other insects. People should be encouraged to buy
"pollinator friendly" seeds and plants free of neonicotinoids because, she said, pollinators
produce two-thirds of the world's food.
"The pesticide piece is, my opinion, the most important," Schneider said, because spraying "will
make the pollinators get sick and die."
She also said that "it's going to take our country a number of years before this pesticide is
banned. We're going to continue to see declines, particularly in monarchs. When people can no
longer get strawberries or almonds or melons or squash, then they're really going to start paying
attention."
This spring, Minnesota's nursery and landscape industry successfully pushed for a change in
state law that allows nurseries to advertise a flower as being good for bees and butterflies as long
as it's not toxic enough to kill them after one sip of nectar or single load of pollen. Garden plants
labeled "pollinator friendly" no longer must be free of insecticides.
The NPS can't lobby for a pesticide ban, Moore said, but intends to do what rangers do best
educate people about the loss of pollinator habitat.
Already, at least 50 organizations have joined the Monarch Corridor cause, including Xcel
Energy, Andersen Windows in Bayport, and Rotary District 5960, which has 60 clubs and 3,000
members. All that's required is pledging to commit to action to save pollinators, whether on
public lands along the St. Croix River or in somebody's backyard.
"Without the pollinators, we lose our food supply," said Marlene Gargulak, Rotary district
governor from Rice Lake, Wis. "I feel so strongly that we have to be involved in this project
because we are supposedly the leaders of communities. We have a responsibility to our citizens,
to our future generations."
Gargulak's district stretches from St. Paul east into Wisconsin, enveloping all of the St. Croix
watershed. She's also working to convince the Rotary district in Minneapolis to join the cause.
"My goal is to get every Rotary club and district on the I-35 corridor actively involved in this
project," she said.
At Andersen Windows, which has 75 acres on the St. Croix River, "that's a big footprint for
pollinators," said spokeswoman Susan Roeder. The corporate giant, which employs 3,800
workers in Washington County and the surrounding region, has planted vegetable and butterfly
gardens on its properties and "the good news is we're not using any herbicides or anything that
will have a negative effect on pollinators."
Habitat decline
The NPS has two federal partners in the project, the U.S. Forest Service and the U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service.
Tom Kerr, who works for the latter, said no scientific measurements exist that show the extent of
pollinator decline in the St. Croix watershed. But he said declining habitat is widely evident.
"When you really start looking, there's not much out there," he said. "We used different
chemicals, some of which are detrimental to milkweed plants. There have been a lot of changes,
especially in how we manage agriculture. Hopefully people take a step back and say `Do I have
to spray?' or `Do I have to mow this ditch?' or `Did I need to pull the milkweed out of my
garden?'"
Kerr, who manages the St. Croix Wetland Management District, said he's currently working on a
large grant application that would provide funding to buy plants and offer technical expertise to
anyone restoring pollinator habitat.
Only sustained work by everyone who signs the Monarch Corridor pledge will make a
difference, he said. "It's a huge problem but you've got to take a piece at a time to resolve it," he
said.