From Environment Colorado <[email protected]>
Subject Monarch caterpillars are starving
Date October 14, 2023 3:31 PM
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John,

Monarch populations are plummeting and the milkweed they rely on is disappearing.

Toxic pesticides have decimated milkweed -- the only plant that monarch caterpillars will eat. With so little food, monarch caterpillars are starving.[1]

Instead of getting ready to become beautiful butterflies, these little caterpillars are going hungry.

We're working to bring milkweed back, end the worst uses of toxic pesticides, and save starving monarchs. Will you donate to help hungry monarchs?
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Thank you,

Ellen Montgomery

1. "Milkweed and Monarchs," National Park Service, last accessed October 11, 2023.
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---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Environment Colorado <[email protected]>
Date: Tue, October 10, 2023
Subject: Monarch butterflies and their caterpillars are weak and hungry
To: John xxxxxx <[email protected]>





It's a sad time to be a monarch butterfly, John.

Monarch caterpillars are running out of food. Milkweed is getting harder and harder for them to find, and it's their only source of food.

We need to end the habitat loss and overuse of pesticides that is leaving monarchs with nothing to eat.

Monarch caterpillars are starving. Will you donate?
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Monarch caterpillars' only food is milkweed, which is rapidly disappearing across America.

Toxic pesticides are one factor contributing to the decline of milkweed. Glyphosate is the main ingredient in Roundup and it destroys monarchs' food. As the use of Roundup soared, milkweed plummeted.[1]

Without milkweed, monarch moms struggle to find a place to lay their eggs. And when monarch caterpillars hatch, they go hungry.[2]

When monarchs grow up and take flight, they have a long migration ahead of them. But it's impossible to make that journey when a butterfly is running on empty.

We need to help milkweed rebound, and in turn, we can help starving monarchs get enough food to survive.

Here's how we're going to save the monarchs:

* To bring milkweed back, we're calling on decision-makers to increase pollinator-friendly habitat and plant more native milkweed.
* We're working to end the use of glyphosate -- the main ingredient in Roundup -- which has decimated plants that monarchs depend on. We also are campaigning to end the worst uses of other toxic pesticides that hurt monarchs, bees and birds.
* Environment Colorado is also calling on Interior Secretary Deb Haaland to protect monarchs under the Endangered Species Act.

Together, we can do what it takes to win -- but our campaigns take resources, and we can't do it without you, John.

Will you donate to help save starving monarchs?
[link removed]

Thank you,

Ellen Montgomery

1. Jeff McMahon, "Monarch butterflies suffered one blow from glyphosate, then another from climate change," Forbes, December 27, 2022.
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2. "Milkweed and Monarchs," National Park Service, last accessed August 4, 2023.
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