LAGUNA BEACH, Calif.—Monarch Butterflies, a species in decline, will soon have a new garden to breed, lay their eggs, and feed on milkweed at Bluebird Park, located on Cress Street. Joining the effort to save the declining monarch butterfly population, city officials authorized a second Monarch Butterfly and Pollinator Garden on March 29 to help protect the species through the National Wildlife Federation, the nation’s largest private nonprofit wildlife conservation, education, and advocacy group established in 1936. “Our main focus is action and education,” Laura Ford, founder of the Pollinator Protection Fund in Laguna Beach, said during a March 29 city council meeting. “Action in terms of planting the right kinds of native milkweed and other native plants to improve the habitat of Western Monarch butterflies. And education providing information and improving awareness so that more people plant monarch habitats anywhere in their gardens, backyards, and window boxes.” Last year, …