Skip to content
Time and Place — A Milestone for Monarchs
Shelly Triplett
KUG35-Fall2022-timeandplace-main-banner

Monarch Watch recently celebrated its 30th year with a flutter of wings and activities, all dedicated to the beloved and at-risk monarch butterfly. Events included an evening in the garden, symposium, banquet and monarch tagging at Baker Wetlands Discovery Center.

Founded in 1992 by KU faculty member Chip Taylor, Ph.D., Monarch Watch provides research, education and public outreach. Through distributing free milkweed (the host plants for monarch caterpillars) and leading the Monarch Waystation program and tagging research, Monarch Watch promotes habitat restoration and helps sustain monarchs’ annual migration.

Monarch Waystation No. 1 was established in 2005 at the home of Monarch Watch on KU’s Lawrence campus. Today, there are more than 41,500 certified Monarch Waystations in home gardens, schoolyards and public spaces across the U.S. and in nine countries. By creating a waystation or adding milkweed to an existing garden, you can support monarch conservation. More than 1 million milkweed plants have been distributed through Monarch Watch campaigns since 2010.

Monarch migration happens in the fall when monarch butterflies migrate from the U.S. and Canada to mountains in central Mexico. They make the return flight in the spring. When tagged, researchers are better able to understand the timing and pace of the migration, survival rates and probability of monarchs reaching Mexico. 

Raising support for research and habitat restoration is an ongoing Monarch Watch effort. They also are seeking to fully fund the Chip and Toni Taylor Professorship in Support of Monarch Watch that was started with a $1.4 million gift from Taylor and his wife, Toni. Additional gifts have brought the total to $2 million, with the target of at least $3 million to fully fund the position in perpetuity. Taylor recently announced he would step down as director, and the search has begun for his successor.

“In 1992, I had no idea how this small project would change my life, nor did I envision Monarch Watch as it is today,” Taylor said. “It’s fair to say that Monarch Watch continues to lead me into new areas of public education and lines of research I hadn’t anticipated. Each year brings new adventures and connections.”

KUG35-Fall2022-timeandplace-image3
Photo by Ann Dean

You Can Help

To support monarch butterflies, visit kuendowment.org/monarchwatch or contact Conor Taft at 785-832-7386 or ctaft@kuendowment.org.

Current Issue
KU-Giving-38-Spring-2024-cover
Issue 38
Spring 2024
In this Spring 2024 issue, we meet faculty and student researchers who are uncovering clues about how organisms change, learn about exciting brain health developments at the KU ADRC, experience a unique study abroad program and get to know inspiring KU students, faculty and alumni.
Latest Articles
KUG38-Spring20234-f-adrc-toc-thumb
A New Narrative for Brain Health
KUG38-Spring20234-f-worldsapart-toc-thumb
No Longer Worlds Apart
KUG38-Spring20234-f-hubofdiscovery-toc-thumb
A Hub of Discovery
Subscribe to Communications

You’re invited to help us create a future where students have uncommon educational experiences, researchers make life-affirming discoveries, and together, we change the world for the better. Ever Onward we go into a future of infinite possibilities.