Are herbicides responsible for the decline in Monarch butterflies?

Originally posted on Control Freaks: Wyoming Weed Science in (almost) Real Time blog.

monarch larvae

The monarch butterfly is in bad shape. The number of monarchs returning to their overwintering sites in Mexico has been declining steadily for at least a decade. The consensus suggests there are several reasons for this decline, including loss of their overwintering habitat and unfavorable weather patterns. But the purported cause of monarch decline that seems to get the most coverage is the loss of milkweed (Asclepias spp) in the midwestern US migratory path. The evidence seems clear that the number of milkweed plants through this region has indeed declined.

The cause for the milkweed decline, though, is a little less certain. The same highly publicized study that documented the decline in milkweed numbers suggested that herbicide use in agricultural fields was the culprit. But the study didn’t control for herbicide use, and therefore, had no way of knowing whether it was actually the herbicide or something else associated with crop production that caused the decline in milkweed. They found a correlation between adoption of glyphosate-resistant crops and estimates of milkweed density in Iowa. Surprisingly, this limitation didn’t stop the authors from concluding herbicides were solely to blame, even titling the paper “Milkweed loss in agricultural fields because of herbicide use” (emphasis mine).

I think there is little doubt that using herbicides in corn and soybean fields has reduced milkweeds in those crops. But the authors also observed a decline in non-agricultural milkweed density over the same period, but discounted the importance of that loss because they observed more eggs in agricultural fields. However, they used vastly different data sources to estimate monarch use of agricultural vs non-agricultural milkweed, so this difference seems tenuous. Even so, if herbicides are the explanation for milkweed decline within agricultural fields, are herbicides also the reason for the decline in non-agricultural areas? Or could whatever is reducing milkweed in non-agricultural areas also be contributing to the decline in agricultural fields? It seems likely that there is more to this story than herbicide use. But the headlines predictably blamed GM crops and associated herbicides for killing all the monarchs. One of the authors of the study even claimed recently that the correlation they found was the “smoking gun.”

There is always a well-known solution to every human problem–neat, plausible, and wrong. -H. L. Mencken

The “GMO crop kills butterflies” narrative is a nice fit for many anti-GMO and anti-pesticide groups. It is certainly plausible, and it makes sense that herbicides made to kill weeds would negatively impact native plants like milkweed. But a new study by USDA-ARS and Penn State scientists suggests what most scientists already knew: the real story is probably much more complicated. It is important to note this study is not directly aimed at finding the root cause of milkweed decline, but it provides information that is very relevant. And there are a lot of things to like about this new paper. The study presents a method to untangle a very complex problem, and this approach could be quite useful to other researchers. But I think what I liked most was that the authors took a very cautious approach to interpreting their results, which is truly refreshing given the topic. Even the institutional press release was very cautious. This study could have easily been over-interpreted to grab headlines, but it wasn’t.

Certainly, there’s no doubt that herbicides sprayed in a crop field will negatively impact any weeds (including milkweed) that are growing in the field, but the impact on vegetation outside the field borders is less obvious. Egan and co-authors questioned the conventional wisdom that herbicides are the primary culprit for reducing native plant diversity in these surrounding areas. Although it is easy to blame herbicides, it is difficult to test this theory directly. Herbicide use in crops always accompanies other practices that could impact native plant diversity. Perhaps it is not the herbicides, but some other factor involved in crop production that is responsible. These other factors confound our ability to quantify the direct impact that herbicides have had on declining native plants. But Egan and co-authors used a rather elegant way to tease out the impact of herbicides. In their words:

“If herbicides are a significant driver of changes in the diversity and composition of plant communities across agricultural landscapes, then we would expect rare species to show consistently lower tolerances to nonlethal exposures than common species with similar life histories.”

In short, if herbicides are to blame for the decrease in plant diversity in areas surrounding agricultural fields, then the plant species that have become rare must be more susceptible to herbicides than plants that are still commonly found. They tested this hypothesis on 5 pairs of plant species; 5 rare species paired with 5 closely related species that remain common in the same area. Two milkweed species were included in the study: Asclepias syriaca (common) and Asclepias tuberosa (rare). They sprayed each species in the study with glyphosate, the herbicide associated with Roundup Ready corn and soybeans, and the herbicide most commonly blamed for milkweed decline. They also tested 2 additional herbicides commonly used in Midwestern corn fields: atrazine and dicamba.

The authors summarize their results very succinctly:

“Contrary to this hypothesis [that herbicides are responsible for reduced plant diversity], our bioassay experiments revealed few significant differences in herbicide tolerances between the paired rare and common species.”

Their data simply didn’t support the idea that herbicides are the primary cause of the decline in the rare species they tested. They even noted that in many cases, the rare species was actually more tolerant to the herbicides than the more commonly found species. The authors rightly note there are many limitations to their study. They only evaluated 5 genera and 3 herbicides, greenhouse studies are not always very representative of field conditions, and genetic variability was limited in their collections, among others.

“Despite these limitations, our results do suggest a challenge to the viewpoint that herbicides are a primary driver of plant biodiversity decline.”

Does this mean herbicides have played no role in the decline of important species like milkweed? Certainly not. Egan’s research was not specifically aimed at milkweed decline, so we shouldn’t extrapolate these results too far. We shouldn’t take this study to be representative of all rare species and all herbicides. And they were only interested in the plants that grow near agricultural fields, not in them. But this research does suggest that there are more important factors than herbicides responsible for the decline of native plant species near crop fields, including milkweeds. Hopefully, the methods used by Egan et al. will be used in future studies that focus primarily on milkweeds and other plant species that now reside in the areas where milkweed has become less common. This would help us unravel the real reasons for the decline in milkweeds. Until then, perhaps we should focus less on trying to blame Monsanto for the decline of the monarchs, and instead start actually doing something that could help bring them back.

Egan, J.F., I.M. Graham, and D.A. Mortensen. 2014. A COMPARISON OF THE HERBICIDE TOLERANCES OF RARE AND COMMON PLANTS IN AN AGRICULTURAL LANDSCAPE. Environmental Toxicology & Chemistry.

Updated 11-Feb-14 to clarify importance of agricultural vs non-agricultural fields.