Does anyone know any information about overwintering Monarchs in Florida? I'm 18 miles west of Tampa and have had some milkweeds and lots of zinnas and porterweeds in my garden for years. The monarchs were in my garden usually by late spring to early summer. The cats ate all my milkweeds fairly rapidly and once they grew back then I got another batch of cats. This went on until mid fall and I didn't notice them after that. The milkweeds would grow back and won't get hit until the next year.
Since the garden became a certified monarch station in September 2006 there have been butterflies and cats in the garden constantly. During the winter of 2007 it was insane as I had more cats than in the fall or now. I nearly ran out of milkweeds a few times and was releasing a lot of butterflies.
I'm assuming I have overwintering butterflies in winter. Is that correct?
They are reproducing. Is that normal for overwintering monarchs?
Are the overwintering butterfly life cycle shorter than those in Mexico? Or do these butterflies have the life cycles of the spring and summer butterflies?
Am I getting monarchs from the eastern seaboard during the fall migration? Or just local butterflies that have decided to stay here year round? I noticed some very ragged butterflies towards the end of the fall 2006 and early winter mitgration season. None of the current butterflies in the yard appear ragged.
Is anyone interested in our Florida "snowbird" butterflies? What can I do to collect data that might help to answer any unanswered question?
I tagged some monarchs last fall but is there a more appropriate time to tag these guys? I got the impression that when the spring migration started that there were less butterflies hanging out in the garden.
I love to hear any ideas, thoughts, or comments.