Roadsides not best place for planting monarch-critical milkweed, study finds
TORONTO — Efforts aimed at reversing a steep decline in the monarch butterfly population by planting traditionally unloved milkweed need to take into account the size and location of the planted patches, new Canadian research indicates.
The study, out of the University of Guelph, finds that restoring milkweed along roadways is less effective than doing so on agricultural lands. Milkweed is critical to the survival of the monarch population because it’s believed to be the only plant the butterflies feed on as caterpillars.
“Roadside patches, which received half the number of eggs compared to agricultural landscapes, may potentially pose a number of threats to monarchs because of vehicle collision and accumulation of noxious chemicals,” the study’s authors write.
“A better strategy may be for managers to develop incentive programs with landowners to plant and maintain milkweeds in agricultural landscapes.”


