Many insects migrate (travel) between their summer and winter homes. The desert locust migrates about 800 miles farther than the monarch butterfly every spring, and the pink-spotted hawk moth migrates about 200 miles less than four times the distance of the monarch butterfly every spring. Laid end to end, the distances traveled by a monarch butterfly, a desert locust, and a pink-spotted hawk moth is about 12,600 miles every spring. How far does each species travel?

Make a plan. What does this last part of the problem suggest that we do with these unknowns?