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Monarch butterflies begin entering Mexico on annual migration

Monarch butterflies gather on top of flowers at the Monarch Butterfly Biosphere Reserve, near the town of Chincua, Mexico in this file photo.. Marco Ugarte/AP Photo

MEXICO CITY – Monarch butterflies have begun entering Mexico on their annual migration from the United States and Canada.

Mexico’s Environment Department said Friday that the orange-and-black butterflies had been spotted by park rangers entering Coahuila state, on the border with Texas.

READ MORE: Groups ask UN to list Mexico Monarch butterfly reserve as ‘in danger’

The butterflies head for the fir- and pine forest of central Mexico, where they spend the winter. No butterfly lives to make the full round trip, and it is unclear how they find the route each year.

Last year, butterflies that reached the wintering grounds covered 2.79 acres (1.13 hectares). That was a 69 per cent rebound from the previous February’s 1.65 acres (0.67 hectare), which was the lowest since record-keeping began in 1993.

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The migratory route can be 5,470 kilometres long.

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