http://www.monarchwatch.org/update/2006/0430.html#8
April 30, 2006 Monarch Watch Update
"I love to get to get together with monarch biologists to share stories
about our favorite organism. The stories go better with beer of course and
it was while enjoying a local brew in the company of several monarch
biologists at the Entomological Society of America conference at Alisomar in
2004 that Bob Pyle related his observation of seeing a red tailed hawk chase
down a monarch. I'm sure I nodded in understanding, hopefully concealing my
disbelief - after all Bob has a reputation for veracity. A hawk chasing a
monarch! Would you believe it? The red-tails I watch catch rodents. The
young red tail pictured below is holding a wood rat it caught just outside
my window at Monarch Watch. Anyway, I was willing to cut Bob some slack but
now must apologize to Bob for ever doubting him - even silently. Recently, I
received a note from Doug Green, a hawk watcher from Cleveland, Tennessee,
who observed broad-wing hawks feeding on monarchs while in flight during
their migration in September. To quote Doug: "perhaps the broad-wing hawks,
flying in 'kettles' of hundreds or thousands, have chosen to migrate with
the monarchs, for an 'in-air' energy source". This is certainly an
interesting observation and it is plausible that both hawks and monarchs
would be using the same thermals in which to soar and glide as they migrate.
If you know of any hawk watchers, you might get the word to them that any
interactions they observe among hawks and monarchs should be noted and
reported."
In the roost along the way and in Mexico, Monarchs are preyed upon by birds:
http://www.monarchwatch.org/biology/pred2.htm
