About 60 miles northwest of Mexico City, Cuauhtemoc Sáenz-Romero is moving a forest 1,000 feet up a mountain. As the climate warms, scientists predict conditions might become too hot and dry for the forest’s sacred fir trees to survive in their current location. “The climate that is good for the sacred fir is now occurring at higher altitudes,” says Sáenz-Romero, a forest geneticist at the Michoacan University of St. Nicholas of Hidalgo.
So he’s planting fir seedlings higher up the mountain, where it’s cooler and wetter. Since 2015, Sáenz-Romero has planted 1,000 sacred fir trees, and he plans to plant 1,000 more. These fir trees are crucial to the life cycle of monarch butterflies, which undertake an epic migration that crosses North America. Each fall, 100 million monarchs fly 2,500 miles from the U.S. and Canada to reach these sacred fir forests, where they spend the winter. Sáenz-Romero wants to save the sacred fir forests, which will help save the butterflies.