http://www.uga.edu/monarchparasites/whatisOE/index.htmlHow to tell if butterflies are infected with OE
"An infected pupa may develop dark spots or blotches two or three days before the butterfly emerges. These abnormal dark areas are parasite spores. Spores form on the eyes, antennae, wing veins, but mostly on the abdomen. You can see the spores through the outside layer of the pupa a day or two before pigments that color the butterfly normally darken the pupa. Before a butterfly emerges from the chrysalis, pigments are laid down coloring the scales that cover the butterfly. This normal change in the color of the pupa is symmetrical. The color change of an infected monarch happens earlier and does not create a balanced pattern on the pupa.
What map are you looking at? OE is every where. This year our winters weren't as cold as they should have been. We didn't have much of a winter in my area; therefore, I'd bet OE will be more of a problem this year. OE usually gets killed off during winters where it freezes.
http://monarchparasites.uga.edu/monarch ... sults.htmlHere are the results for OE. Check these out.