Monarchs of the Great Plains: Plant Power and Colonial Legacies in North America

Authors

  • Sara M. Gregg Indiana University Bloomington

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.5282/rcc-springs-2864

Abstract

Historian Sara M. Gregg explores the migratory Monarch butterfly’s unique connection with its host plant, milkweed. The article reveals the effects of a history of Euro-American settlement and agricultural practices on both of these species as global and local efforts alight and take flight across a prairie biome threatened with an uncertain future.

Author Biography

  • Sara M. Gregg, Indiana University Bloomington

    Sara M. Gregg is an associate professor of history at Indiana University-Bloomington. Her work focuses on environmental change, agricultural history, and land policy, and her current project, Little Piece of Earth: The Hidden History of Homesteading on the Great Plains, examines the process of state formation in the US West from the first years in the contact zone through the several Homestead Acts and to the present. She was a Carson Fellow from May to August 2017.

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Published

13-12-2022

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Section

Articles