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By Tony Gomez
Raising healthy monarch butterflies relies on using simple raising techniques that promote monarch health and will
prevent monarch diseases from occurring in the first place. The sad truth is, once your monarch larvae are sick, it’s
usually too late to save them…
The explosion of comments and questions I receive about monarch diseases suggests they’re a common problem for
many raisers. There’s still a lot of work to be done to help everyone raise butterflies with (at least) a 90% survival
rate.
In the past few seasons, I’ve raised hundreds of butterflies from tiny monarch egg. The only casualties I’ve
experienced are from carelessness (rushing cage cleaning), and accidentally bringing in monarch predators with
milkweed…mainly small spiders.
Monarch disease and death do not have to be a regular part of your raising experience.
My goal is to bring you an awe-inspiring and joyful raising experience free of monarch diseases and death….or at
least bring loss down to a tolerable level, so you can experience the joys of raising, while helping the struggling
monarch population. Are you ready to get serious about disease prevention and raise healthy monarchs? Let's do
this...
Here are 12 monarch health issues that can be largely avoided with a few simple precautions:
1. Tachinid Flies
Tachinid flies are hard to differentiate from all the other flies in your garden just innocently pollinating the
milkweed. However, if they’re sitting still, look for hairy flies with big red eyes:
These parasitic flies lay tiny eggs on monarch caterpillars that will need magnification 🔍 for confirmation:
The hatching maggots burrow inside the caterpillar and feed from the inside out, eventually killing it. 🐛💀
You can typically tell your caterpillar’s been compromised when it starts to grow smaller and skinnier. Often, it will
appear small if it attempts to pupate. The caterpillar often dies while forming its chrysalis. Soon after, white tachinid
maggots will exit the caterpillar and repel to the cage floor, leaving long white strands of evidence hanging from the
deceased caterpillar.
Instead of Growing Big and Plump…
If the caterpillar still manages to form the chrysalis, you’ll start to see dark spots on the chrysalis in the next few
days…the maggots will soon emerge. Soon after, they will each form a dark red:
Prevention Tips:
Although, I recently had maggots emerge from a small (instar 3) monarch caterpillar I was raising. It was likely
parasitized as a small instar 1 or 2 caterpillar…
When tachinid parasitism occurs it’s very disappointing, but these parasites will not spread to other caterpillars in
your cage, since they can only be spread by the adult flies. When you find maggots or red tachinid pupae in your
cage, simply remove them and raise on!
OE is a protozoan parasite that caterpillars ingest on milkweed. It’s spread through microscopic spores coming off
the wings and bodies of adult butterflies. These protozoa multiply inside the caterpillar and can cause weakness,
disfigurement, and an untimely death. You are most likely to notice symptoms of OE infection in the chrysalis or the
butterfly. If you suspect your butterfly has severe OE infection, releasing it will only spread the parasite to future
monarchs.
Prevention Tips:
Want to know more about OE and disinfecting monarchs, milkweed, and raising supplies? Click here
💀 BLACK DEATH 💀
Commonly referred to as black death, your caterpillars will deflate, turn black, then liquify like something out of a
horror movie! This virus can also affect chrysalides as the entire monarch chrysalis turns black.
Prevention Tips:
Use a mesh cage that allows good ventilation, allowing water to evaporate
Vacuum up frass, wipe down and dry cage daily
Rinse milkweed cuttings and leaves with water before serving
Rinse cages with a weak 5-10% bleach solution at the end of every season
Caterpillars leaking fluid or refusing to eat for more than 24 hours should be separated from the rest
If you have sick caterpillars or chrysalides turn black, disinfect the affected cage before raising more
monarchs…and switch out the milkweed supply!
This bacteria can be found in soil and on plants. This bacterium thrives in warm, moist conditions which is why it’s
important to have a habitat with good air flow where excess moisture can evaporate. Pseudomonas typically affect
caterpillars that are already weakened by other diseases. Similar to NPV, monarch caterpillars and chrysalides will
slowly fade to black death.
Prevention Tips:
Use a mesh cage that allows good ventilation, allowing water to evaporate
Use stem cuttings instead of potted plants to eliminate soil from their habitat
If using potted plants, cover the soil or water with a hydrogen peroxide mix to kill pathogens
Vacuum up frass, wipe down and dry cage daily
Rinse milkweed cuttings and leaves with water before serving
Rinse cages with a weak 5-10% bleach solution at the end of every season
Caterpillars leaking fluid or refusing to eat for more than 48 hours should be separated from the rest
If you have sick caterpillars or chrysalides turn black, disinfect the affected cage before raising more
monarchs…and switch out the milkweed supply!
4. Tainted Milkweed
It’s hard to imagine that anyone selling milkweed would treat it with pesticides, since the vast majority of milkweed
customers are buying it to support monarch caterpillars and butterflies. Unfortunately, this is not always the case…
In the world of raising butterflies, tainted milkweed often rears its ugly leaves when people run out of milkweed for
their caterpillars and are forced to make a milkweed emergency run to the nearest store/nursery. If you ever have to
do this, make sure you are purchasing pesticide-free milkweed, or your poor caterpillars will never get the chance to
finish their amazing transformation…
If your caterpillar has ingested pesticides it will often expel green vomit. If this happens, rinse the caterpillar off
under a faucet, then place it on a new milkweed source immediately! If the current milkweed has been treated with
systemic pesticides, the chemicals are inside the plant and can’t be rinsed off.
Another sign of pesticide poisoning is when a caterpillar dies in the middle of forming its chrysalis. This occurs
when caterpillars ingest insect growth regulators, which include organic pesticides like neem oil.
Both of these events can be disturbing and disappointing, but here’s how you can largely avoid them:
Prevention Tips:
growing tip: if you suspect nursery plants have been treated with systemic pesticides, cut them back to 6-12″ so
healthy new stems and foliage can emerge. The regrowth will be fine for future caterpillars.
Until recently, I thought bringing in monarch eggs assured you of hatching healthy monarch caterpillars. But there’s
a new parasite in town… Trichogramma wasps lay their eggs inside of monarch eggs. If your egg turns completely
dark (instead of only dark on top) monitor it for 48 hours to insure it’s not a viable monarch. If it doesn’t hatch,
squeeze the egg inside the milkweed leaf and discard or little wasps will emerge in about 10 days!
Prevention Tips:
If you see a monarch female depositing eggs, collect them right away
6. Chalcid Wasps
These mini parasitic wasps stalk your j’ing caterpillar waiting for the perfect moment to parasitize it…right after the
caterpillar forms a chrysalis. While it’s still soft, they lay their eggs inside. Hundreds of wasp parasitoids will
eventually emerge from the chrysalis at the expense of your deceased monarch…
Prevention Tips:
Use fine mesh enclosures to raise monarchs. Larger holes in laundry baskets will allow these impossibly
small wasps access to your monarchs during this most-vulnerable time.
If raising outdoors, do not leave your habitat open for long periods while cleaning and check the cage for
flying insects before closing
note: chalcid wasps are found worldwide, but concentrated in tropical and subtropical regions
7. Anal Prolapse
Photo Courtesy of Lori Anne Probst Photography
When this occurs the caterpillar’s rectum protrudes from its anus, leaving a vibrant green ball exposed at the end of
your caterpillar. It’s not known what causes this, but it’s always fatal to the caterpillar.
8. Dehydration
I realize this isn’t a disease, but it’s a far too common problem that is taking precious monarchs away from us before
they bloom into beautiful butterflies. Dehydrated monarchs can get stuck inside their chrysalides causing
deformation and death. They may also have issues forming them.
Prevention Tips:
spritz milkweed and caterpillars daily with a spray bottle filled with water- make sure the caterpillar cage
has good ventilation (i.e. a mesh cage) so the water evaporates and there isn’t condensation inside the
habitat that could cause disease
Hydration of monarchs must start at the egg stage for healthy development
Some experts and enthusiasts disagree with spritzing milkweed/caterpillars, but imagine eating food for two weeks
without water…and staying healthy?!
9. Invisible Predators
These are the monarch predators that you unwittingly invite in to your cage, trapping them inside with your
unsuspecting monarchs. I have done this with small spiders and stink bugs. This can be a problem when you raise on
potted plants because of all the nooks and crannies where predators can easily avoid detection.
Prevention Tips:
raise monarchs on small cuttings or individual leaves so it’s easier to inspect the milkweed
thoroughly rinse milkweed before serving it up to monarch caterpillars
spray potted plants with water to detect spider webs
This naturally-occurring bacteria is used in powders and sprays to protect food crops. It has become a widely used
pest management tool to control the spread of gypsy moth caterpillars in spring, with all other caterpillars (including
monarchs) becoming collateral damage.
When ingested, BT ruptures the gut lining of monarch caterpillars. The irritated caterpillar stops eating and will die
within a few days.
Prevention Tips:
She had just applied a topical flea and tick medicine on her cat. The cat had shown interest in the caterpillars and
rubbed against their cage several times. Two days later, all of the caterpillars were on death’s doorstep and had to be
euthanized.
If this happens to you, rinse caterpillars, cage, and milkweed with water and maybe they’ll recover. Otherwise…
Prevention Tips:
keep pets recently treated with flea and tick medicine away from growing caterpillars.
If you’ve handled a dog or cat that’s had a flea treatment applied, wash your hands before handling
monarchs, milkweed, or raising supplies.
What should you do if you suspect your monarch has a disease or parasite, but aren’t 100% sure?
Isolate the egg, caterpillar, chrysalis, or butterfly and monitor it for confirmation of an issue. If the questionable
individual is kept in a separate food container or mesh habitat, it will not spread potential pathogens to the rest of the
monarchs you are raising.
Wood raising cages are hard to disinfect, which can cause ongoing disease issues. According to Monarch expert
Dr. Karen Oberhauser:
“It is difficult to clean wood cages unless you have access to an autoclave. At Minnesota, we use wood and screen
cages to rear larvae, and have successfully decontaminated them in an autoclave. If you use mesh or plastic cages,
they can be decontaminated by soaking them in a 10% bleach solution (approximately 10 ml Chlorox bleach to 100
ml water) or 100% ethanol for at least 15 minutes, then rinsed well. Use the bleach solution to soak any tools that
you use to transfer larvae, rinsing them after they are soaked. Wipe down countertops and other surfaces with the
bleach solution in areas in which you have reared larvae or kept butterflies. The spores survive long periods of time
(over a year), and can also survive freezing temperatures, so equipment that you used last year or left outside over
the winter will still be able to infect larvae.”
Prevention Tips:
Just an ounce of prevention in raising monarch butterflies will help you avoid monarch diseases, parasites, and
death, so you can grow healthy monarchs through the entire monarch butterfly life cycle.