Residents found the brightly colored orange and black insects by the bucket-full Monday throughout the community, WJLA-TV reported.
A social media post showing the extent of the killing went viral as people expressed fear that a neighborhood mosquito spray could be to blame.
A mystery in a local neighborhood. Thousands of dead #MonarchButterflies litter the ground. Saddened neighbors wonder what killed them. We’re seeking answers @ABC7News pic.twitter.com/LGycyjiCe8
— Brad Bell (@ABC7Brad) September 25, 2019
The Maryland Department of Agriculture rejected the idea that the spray they used last week to kill mosquitos also killed the butterflies.
Agency officials told WJLA that the chemicals used to kill the mosquitos was sprayed in low concentrations and was "not known to affect larger species like monarch butterflies.
Wildlife experts have worried in recent years about monarch butterfly populations and have recorded declining numbers of the colorful winged insects mainly attributed to loss of habitat and pesticide use.
Thousands of #monarch #butterflies have turned up dead in a community on Kent Island, MD. What killed them remains a mystery. People in the Bayside neighborhood found the bright orange butterflies on the ground Monday morning. Several people gathered... https://t.co/13TCPnfUhK
— Justice for Cecil (@CecilsJustice) September 26, 2019
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