Tennessee Rolls Out Free, Mail-Order Resource to Help Restore and Preserve Habitats for Monarch Butterflies, Other Pollinator Species

The Tennessee Department of Transportation (TDOT) recently launched a new initiative aimed at restoring and preserving habitats for monarch butterflies and other pollinator species across the state.

Project Milkweed, according to TDOT, is a mail-order resource that provides free native milkweed seeds to Tennesseans upon completion of an online form.

The department’s rollout of the new mail-order resource was made in conjunction with National Pollinator Week.

Milkweed is a flowering plant that serves a critical role as a host plant in the life cycle of monarch butterflies, as it provides a place for monarchs to lay their eggs and serves as food for their larvae and caterpillars.

Tennesseans can place an order for two types of seed species – Red Milkweed (Asclepias incarnata) or Common Milkweed (Asclepias syriaca). Residents can request up to five packets of seeds for both milkweed species. Each packet contains 20 seeds.

Both the monarch butterfly population and milkweed habitats have experienced a 90% decline since 1992 due to habitat loss, disease, pesticide use, and changing climate, according to TDOT, which called efforts like Project Milkweed “critical” to restoring the pollinators and host plants.

Yes, Every Kid

TDOT’s new resource is a subset of its Pollinator Habitat Program, a “partnership between multiple state agencies and nonprofits that aims to conserve native pollinators and pollinator habitats.”

“Pollinators are vital to life, growing food, and the economy of Tennessee,” TDOT Commissioner Butch Eley said in a statement. “This effort is an excellent way to educate the public about their critical importance and the threats they face and expand pollinator-friendly practices from TDOT-owned rights-of-way to neighborhood backyards.”

Pollinators, TDOT notes, are “more diverse than just bees and butterflies and can include birds, bats, beetles, moths, and more.” By pollinating food crops, pollinators contribute an estimated $24 billion to the economy.

Orders for milkweed seeds are taken on a rolling basis and will be fulfilled during September and October just in time for fall planting, according to TDOT. For more information on Project Milkweed and how to order seeds, click here.

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Kaitlin Housler is a reporter at The Tennessee Star and The Star News Network.
Photo “Butterflies” by Pixabay.

 

 

 

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2 Thoughts to “Tennessee Rolls Out Free, Mail-Order Resource to Help Restore and Preserve Habitats for Monarch Butterflies, Other Pollinator Species”

  1. Joe Blow

    Nothing is “FREE”. Tennessee could reduce our taxes if the state government would just get back to the basics for which it was formed. All we get is bigger and bigger and bigger government with this touchy-feely stuff.

  2. kitty kat

    I just read milkweed is toxic for dogs and horses and can take over one’s yard. Seeding sounds like a noble cause but not worth the risk to my dogs and horses.

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