The Magical, Mesmerizing Migration of Monarch Butterflies | Jaime Rojo | TED

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2024-10-21 ・ TED


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The Magical, Mesmerizing Migration of Monarch Butterflies | Jaime Rojo | TED

8,442 views ・ 2024-10-21

TED


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

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Few insects have captured our imagination like the monarch butterfly.
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Their migration is one of the most iconic wildlife spectacles in North America,
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but they are also one of the best environmental indicators we have
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of the health of our ecosystems.
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And they have been in decline for the last 40 years.
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So they might be telling us a bigger story.
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A story about our relationship with the natural world.
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Every year, these amazing insects
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undertake one of the most extraordinary journeys on this planet.
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It takes from three to five generations of monarchs
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to complete the whole migration.
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And it starts in Mexico in the spring,
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when the monarchs that spend the winter there
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travel back north to lay their eggs.
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So the first and second generation of monarchs
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are born and remain in the USA,
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and they live up to six weeks, more or less.
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But most migratory monarchs belong to the third and fourth generation,
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and they emerge in the late summer, early fall
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when the days start to get shorter
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and it's cooler and they feel it
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and they undergo a hormonal change in their bodies called the diapause.
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And this puts their mating instinct on hold.
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And they live longer then.
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This super generation will live up to nine months.
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And they will complete the trip to Mexico,
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3,000 miles to a place where they have never been before.
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Because remember, they are the great granddaughters
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of the butterflies that left in the spring.
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How they do it, how they find the exact same location remains a mystery,
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especially if we consider that the sanctuaries,
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the forests they are looking for
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are located only on 12 isolated mountaintops
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in central Mexico,
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and these are the perfect conditions for the monarchs.
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It is cool and moist in high elevations.
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But for years scientists have been trying to answer the same question:
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how do they exactly find their way?
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There are many hypotheses.
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Some say it has to do with geomagnetism.
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There are evidences that they use visual cues from the landscape.
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You know, the ridges of the mountains.
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There's even theories about the odor of the pheromones of previous butterflies
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that were there the year before.
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But the truth is that we don't know exactly.
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And they are continually actively researching this topic.
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Physiologist Christine Merlin discovered that the monarchs use their antennae
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as part of a very sophisticated solar compass.
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And researchers from the University of Iowa
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are using this radio tracker
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to monitor the short-range movement of the monarchs when they feed.
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But this thing, as you can imagine, is very cumbersome.
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You cannot track the long-distance migration of a monarch with this.
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Until recently.
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A team from University of Michigan is developing
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what promises to be a breakthrough technology:
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an ultra-light sensor
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that, combined with an algorithm,
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will, for the first time, be able to track
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the single path of one monarch
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when they make it to Mexico, which is very exciting.
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But often for these complex problems,
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the best and most efficient solutions are the simplest ones.
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We have been tagging monarchs for 30 years.
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We use these stickers that are very light,
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and they contain coded information and information about their origin.
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And this is how we discovered
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where the monarchs were spending the winter in the '70s.
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And today, it continues to be one
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of the most popular environmental education [activities] in North America,
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with volunteers having tagged more than two million butterflies in 30 years.
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Now all these challenges that we face to track the monarchs
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are nothing if we compare them
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to what the monarchs themselves have to face
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throughout their long journey,
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especially starting in the prairies of North America,
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or at least what is left of them.
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Because every year we are losing one million acres of prairie
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being transformed into land development and agricultural fields.
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And in the '90s, this problem got worse
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because the widespread use of herbicides combined with genetically modified crops
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created a new problem.
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They basically wiped out the native grasses from the fields,
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including the milkweed.
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And the milkweed is the host plant of the monarchs.
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That means they need it to lay their eggs and to feed their hungry caterpillars.
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Without milkweed, the monarch population started to collapse.
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Now our monarchs will continue their journey south,
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and they will have to face new threats,
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like roadkill that kills three percent of monarchs every year,
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or even light pollution from big cities that confuses them,
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it alters their patterns of sleep.
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But they will endure and eventually will reach Mexico.
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Aha, a last surprise, deforestation.
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Deforestation makes them more vulnerable to climate change.
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And as many of you know, climate change has many faces:
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droughts, heat waves
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or even snowstorms, like the one you are seeing in this picture,
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have become the major challenge for the monarchs in the short term.
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So I have to ask you
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don't let this beautiful illusion of plenty fool you,
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because the monarchs are in serious trouble.
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But there's also good news,
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there's many people trying to protect them.
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Working with the local communities in Mexico
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has been essential to control the deforestation rates.
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Farmers are working with conservationists,
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and they are using drones
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to analyze vast tracts of fields in search of milkweed.
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Because the science is very clear,
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all the monarchs need is their habitat back.
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And we can do that by planting milkweed
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and by planting native grasses with flowers.
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That's why thousands of citizens along the migratory route
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are turning their backyards into habitat for the monarchs.
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(Applause)
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Even small parks in big cities like Chicago can help,
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because these are like gas stations,
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pit stops for the monarchs when they travel.
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And as you can imagine, farmers play an essential part.
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These strips that you see in the picture are called prairie strips
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and are strategically located into areas of the field to attract pollinators.
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But they also protect the soil and conserve the water,
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so they benefit the farming.
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And all I can say is they work
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because the only pair of mating monarchs
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that I was able to photograph during this story
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was during a visit to one of these prairie strips in Iowa.
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It will be the offspring of these butterflies
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that in subsequent generations will complete the cycle
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and make it back to Mexico.
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And here they will be receiving high honors.
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(Laughter)
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For the Mazahua people in Mexico,
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the monarchs are the souls of their ancestors,
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and the day of the Dead on November 1, honors this tradition.
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And as you can see,
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monarchs have become the undisputed pop icon
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of this celebration.
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Now our monarchs now continue their life cycle in an alien world.
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Everything is different for them.
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They have never been here, they are tired,
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they huddle together.
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So the first days of the season they are really vulnerable.
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(Video) I have spent the last 10 days doing the same thing in the mornings.
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They are getting so close to the branches I want.
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I think I have it, for the first time in many days.
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By many days, I mean 20 days.
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But I did get the shots that I needed.
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Thank you.
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(Applause)
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Now as new waves of monarch make it to Mexico,
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the branches soon fill up with clusters,
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and it is now when Dr. Green and his team will travel to Mexico,
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and they will try to locate a signal from that sensor they installed earlier.
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They need just one, one signal
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that can answer some of the questions
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that we have about the migration.
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I, as a photographer, I needed one monarch, just one,
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but from a very different perspective.
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(Video) You see this tree that is behind me,
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and it's packed with monarchs.
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So if you get to see what I'm doing, there is this nice pattern.
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There's always one late monarch that tries to find the spot
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half an hour later than everyone else.
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And that's what I'm waiting for.
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The flashy orange butterfly in a texture of roosting monarchs.
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So we'll see.
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So I would be that late monarch.
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20 years chasing monarchs,
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and I cannot get enough of this kind of images.
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They are really effective, in my opinion.
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(Applause)
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Thank you.
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(Applause)
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Thank you very much.
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There is an increase in the temperature
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as the season advances, and the monarchs start to get more active.
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They start to hang out in the local pub,
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which is the stream that runs down the hill.
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And with that increase of activity, there's also an increase in the tourism.
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And the tourism is the economic engine for this region during the winter months.
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And they all want to see this beautiful scene,
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the monarchs flying over the blue skies,
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an amazing sight.
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Sometimes it never happens, and sometimes it’s OK.
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But one day, one day, I got to witness something really extraordinary.
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(Video) I have been to this reserve so many times,
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and I have never seen something like what we have encountered today.
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It's just amazing.
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You can see the sky is covered in butterflies.
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(Camera shutter clicking)
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(Speaking in Spanish)
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All I want to do is to photograph.
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And I see your faces, I know what you're thinking,
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that this was the easiest picture of my assignment.
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It took me 20,000 frames to get this thing right.
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So it was not easy at all.
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So after all this time,
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I know for sure that if there is one iconic species in North America,
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this is the monarch.
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We are living in very polarized times,
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and the story of the monarchs can inspire hope again,
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can bring unity across our borders -- we need that.
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And most importantly,
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it can reconnect us again with the natural world.
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North America will be a much sadder place,
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this planet will be a much sadder place,
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if we lose the monarch.
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There is a growing movement to protect them,
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but we need to act now.
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So, muchisimas gracias, thank you very much.
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(Applause and cheers)
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Thank you, thank you very much.
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(Applause and cheers)
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