Intro
They fit in the palm of your hand.
Every year, they fly from Mexico to Canada and back.
They are also listed as an endangered species in Canada.
You guess it right, it's the monarch butterflies.
An Endangered Species
Citizen-driven Efforts
The data was collected over the .... iNaturalist
Data Analysis
Data Cleaning
The raw dataset contained 703,394 records spanning from the 1800s to 2025.
The first thing I noticed was that more than half the records (371,805)
had no recoverable date, meaning neither the eventDate field nor the year,
month, and day fields were populated.
As visible in the chart below, data before 1980 is extremely sparse, so I
restricted the analysis to 1980 onwards. The spike around 1999-2001 also
stood out. Digging into it, it turned out to be a bulk submission from
Monarch Watch, a dedicated monarch monitoring program based out of the
University of Kansas that has tracked the species since the early 1990s.
These records were aggregated annually and lacked day and month
information, making them unusable for phenological analysis.
After removing records with unrecoverable dates, missing coordinates,
duplicates, and pre-1980 observations, the dataset was reduced to 316,273
records. Given sparse coverage in the early years, the analysis was
further restricted to 2010 onwards, yielding a final dataset of 312,235
records, roughly 44% of the original.
Data Visualization
The maps below show monarch butterfly sightings across North America
colored by month. The full migration corridor is immediately visible, with
purple and blue dots cluster in Mexico during winter, greens push north
through spring, and reds and oranges spread across the US and Canada
through summer and fall. Comparing across periods, the density of
sightings increases noticeably over time, largely reflecting the growth of
iNaturalist as a platform rather than the actual monarch population.
2010-2015
2016-2020
2021-2025
all years
Jan
Feb
Mar
Apr
May
Jun
Jul
Aug
Sep
Oct
Nov
Dec
Each dot represents a sighting, colored by month of observation.
Colors follow the seasonal cycle, with cool purples and blues in
winter, greens in spring, warm oranges and reds through summer and
early fall.
The animation below shows the monthly migration pattern across the
full dataset. Watch the monarchs move north through spring and return
south in the fall.
Statistical Analysis
To better understand the migration pattern, I focused on the Atlantic
coast corridor and traced the path monarchs take as they move north
through Georgia, the Carolinas, Virginia, and up through New England.
The table below shows the number of sightings per state per year. The
iNaturalist effect is immediately visible: records in every state jump
dramatically after 2017, reflecting platform growth rather than monarch
population changes.
| State |
2010 |
2011 |
2012 |
2013 |
2014 |
2015 |
2016 |
2017 |
2018 |
2019 |
2020 |
2021 |
2022 |
2023 |
2024 |
2025 |
| Connecticut |
3 |
7 |
6 |
1 |
21 |
7 |
43 |
75 |
92 |
225 |
220 |
362 |
338 |
213 |
325 |
493 |
| Delaware |
1 |
0 |
2 |
2 |
8 |
14 |
15 |
31 |
39 |
42 |
106 |
141 |
134 |
149 |
151 |
289 |
| Georgia |
8 |
27 |
17 |
13 |
25 |
5 |
17 |
43 |
59 |
126 |
199 |
253 |
387 |
286 |
236 |
633 |
| Maine |
4 |
1 |
35 |
18 |
36 |
10 |
48 |
151 |
112 |
352 |
202 |
347 |
506 |
208 |
484 |
714 |
| Maryland |
7 |
8 |
13 |
16 |
62 |
64 |
151 |
233 |
344 |
557 |
817 |
847 |
1034 |
571 |
627 |
1753 |
| Massachusetts |
2 |
9 |
25 |
18 |
50 |
54 |
70 |
198 |
300 |
760 |
529 |
928 |
915 |
667 |
937 |
1117 |
| New Jersey |
22 |
17 |
29 |
15 |
33 |
45 |
81 |
196 |
263 |
495 |
465 |
688 |
459 |
382 |
747 |
1526 |
| New York |
39 |
34 |
29 |
16 |
38 |
44 |
85 |
502 |
631 |
1378 |
1233 |
1649 |
1242 |
969 |
1336 |
2246 |
| North Carolina |
8 |
4 |
11 |
10 |
23 |
82 |
66 |
121 |
253 |
370 |
602 |
631 |
642 |
676 |
705 |
1683 |
| Rhode Island |
1 |
0 |
3 |
12 |
9 |
9 |
21 |
37 |
36 |
66 |
53 |
82 |
88 |
78 |
116 |
137 |
| South Carolina |
9 |
19 |
12 |
5 |
21 |
28 |
53 |
104 |
104 |
150 |
227 |
231 |
189 |
200 |
195 |
418 |
| Virginia |
15 |
13 |
40 |
13 |
41 |
62 |
126 |
220 |
409 |
585 |
1223 |
987 |
997 |
732 |
761 |
2074 |
Despite the uneven coverage, a clear pattern emerges when we look at early
arrival dates. For each state, I calculated the 5th percentile sighting
date across years with at least 100 records, effectively when monarchs
first consistently show up. Only years with at least 5 valid years of data
were included.
The results tell a clean story. South Carolina sees its first consistent
sightings around March 30, Georgia around April 17, and the signal moves
steadily northward through Virginia in June, reaching Maine by early July.
The map below visualizes this progression along the corridor. This is the
spring northward migration captured in citizen science data. While not
perfect, it is remarkably coherent given the limitations of the dataset.
Limitations of Citizen-driven Dataset
A trend analysis to investigate shifts in arrival timings was attempted
but with at most 10 years of reliable data per state and significant
growth in citizen science participation over the same period, it was not
possible to draw statistically robust conclusions.
The Western Corridor
Unlike the eastern population which follows a north-south corridor to
Mexico, western monarchs follow an inland-coastal pattern. Sightings in
Salt Lake City peak in July, reflecting the summer inland breeding season.
As fall approaches, monarchs begin their journey westward to the
California coast. San Francisco sees its peak in October as the migration
arrives, while San Luis Obispo, one of the most famous overwintering sites
in North America, peaks in December as monarchs settle in for the winter.
The data captures this difference clearly.
This population has suffered a catastrophic decline. The western
overwintering population has dropped more than 95% since the 1980s, making
it at greater risk of extinction than the eastern population. A dedicated
analysis of the western corridor warrants further investigation.
Conclusions
Next Steps
References