Skip to main content
Skip to main content

Butterflies


The Buzz About Pollinators

June 22, 2022 Casey C. Keel, Public Affairs Specialist, Research, Education, and Economics

It’s National Pollinators Week! As an annual celebration supporting pollinators and pollinator health, we want to highlight USDA’s ongoing investments in pollinator health, crop production, and conservation. USDA’s investments help ensure the continued health of pollinators and their contribution to...

Research and Science

Evaluating Milkweed Species to Enhance Monarch Butterfly Conservation

November 07, 2017 Leah Hermens, Natural Resources Conservation Service

Did you know it’s travel season for monarch butterflies? Each fall, millions of these black-and-orange butterflies journey south from their summer quarters in the United States to their winter homes, which for some is as far away as Mexico.

Conservation

Pollinator Week: Celebrating Blue Butterflies on the Great Lakes

June 21, 2016 Leah Anderson, U.S. Forest Service

In honor of National Pollinator Week, the U.S. Forest Service joins organizations and individuals across the world to celebrate pollinators and share ways to help them survive and thrive. Pollinators are vital to healthy ecosystems. Eighty percent of flowering plants require pollination by animals...

Forestry

High Five for Pollinators: Busy Bees, Bats and Butterflies

December 15, 2015 Sarah Haymaker, USDA Natural Resources Conservation Service

Day and night, pollinators are at work all around us—and it's not just honey bees. Did you know that pollinators are responsible for one out of three bites of food we eat? If you'd like to learn more, we've pulled together five blogs from 2015 highlighting some surprising facts about these busy...

Conservation Forestry

Library Garden Provides 'Rest Stop' for Monarch Butterflies

December 04, 2015 Ellen Starr, Biologist, Natural Resources Conservation Service, Illinois

The pollinator garden at our library in Princeton, Ill. is a popular rest stop for monarch butterflies on their cross-continental journey. My agency, USDA’s Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS), worked with local partners and businesses to create a 2,400-square-foot pollinator garden as a...

Conservation Initiatives

NRCS Partners with Farmers, Ranchers to Aid Monarch Butterflies

November 12, 2015 Jason Weller, Chief, Natural Resources Conservation Service

No matter where you grew up, you are likely familiar with monarch butterflies. You may have childhood memories from science class when you watched those peculiar green caterpillars transform into beautiful butterflies. Depending on where you live, you may have seen masses of their orange-and-black...

Conservation

Migrating Monarchs

July 17, 2015 Karin Theophile, International Programs, U.S. Forest Service

Last month, beautiful monarch butterflies floated across Chicago’s skyline as a part of their annual migration. During this year’s journey, they found more milkweed plants in several places along their paths because of an innovative program that connects urban communities with nature. Area school...

Forestry Trade

Updated USDA Program Enables Farmers and Ranchers to Help Monarch Butterflies

June 19, 2015 Justin Fritscher and Jocelyn Benjamin, Natural Resources Conservation Service

An update to one of USDA’s Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) key conservation programs will enable farmers and ranchers to aid the imperiled monarch butterfly. This year, NRCS updated its Conservation Stewardship Program to include incentives for farmers and ranchers who plant milkweed...

Conservation

Celebrating a World of Benefits from a Dwindling Resource

June 18, 2015 Jocelyn Benjamin, Natural Resources Conservation Service

Tomorrow, USDA’s Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) is joining the festivities at the sixth annual Pollinator Festival in honor of National Pollinator Week. Bees, butterflies, bats, birds, beetles and other animals play a critical role in the production of fruit or seeds, including plants...

Conservation

It's Time to Talk about the Birds and the Bees -- and the Butterflies, Bats and Beetles

June 16, 2015 Ann Mills, USDA Deputy Under Secretary for Natural Resources and the Environment and Jon Jarvis, National Park Service Director

Cross-posted from the Department of Interior blog: From birds and bees to butterflies, bats and beetles, pollinators are a diverse group and are critically important to terrestrial life on our planet. Without our help, however, their populations will continue to decline as a result of numerous...

Animals Plants
Subscribe to Butterflies

AskUSDA

One central entry point for you to access information and help from USDA.