Butterfly Gardens - Fact Sheet
Butterflies are some of nature’s most exquisite and fascinating creatures.
However, loss of habitat and widespread use of pesticides have resulted in far
fewer butterflies
in recent years. Fortunately, city gardens can be designed to encourage the return
of these winged beauties.
The Life of a Butterfly
It’s important to realize that a butterfly is the last stage in the life cycle
that starts as an egg. Eggs are laid on specific plants. In fact, most butterflies
are very particular about the plants their offspring will eat. If these “host” plants
aren’t available the adults will fly away trying to find them. Once found, eggs
are laid on the host plant, which eventualy hatch into tiny caterpillars. Each
type of caterpillar has its own distinctive markings, and may look entirely different
than the butterfly it will become.
After feeding on the host plant for a number of weeks, the caterpillar will wrap
itself in a covering called a chrysalis, where it undergoes a miraculous transformation,
to later emerge as a butterfly. In its adult form, the butterfly’s diet changes.
Now it feeds on the sweet nectar of flowers for the energy it needs to live and
fly. Soon it will seek a “host” plant again, to lay eggs and complete its life
cycle.
Plants for Butterflies
The best way to attract butterflies to your yard is to grow host plants for caterpillars
as well as nectar plants for adults.
Butterfly Host Plants:
- American Painted Lady - pearly everlasting, forget-me-not
- Black Swallowtail* - dill, parsley, carrot, fennel
- Eastern Tailed Blue - clover and other legumes
- Milbert’s Tortoiseshell* - nettles
- Monarch* - milkweeds
- Mourning Cloak - willow, elm, poplar
- Painted Lady - thistle, burdock, sunflower, hollyhock, borage, mallow
- Red Admiral* - nettles
- Silver Spotted Skipper - black locust, honey locust, alfalfa, wisteria
- Silvery Blue - everlasting peas, vetch, lupine
- Spring Azure - viburnum, blueberry, dogwood, spirea, milkweed, meadowsweet,
willow
- Tiger Swallowtail - black cherry, poplar, ash, birch, willow
- Viceroy - thistle, willow
- White Admiral - willow, poplar, hawthorn, birch, juneberry, basswood
*These butterflies are common to the Stratford area
Nectar Plants
Adult butterflies sip nectar from many flowers, such as aster, beebalm, Black-eyed
Susan, blazing star, butterfly bush, chrysanthemum, columbine, coneflower, cosmos,
daisy, goldenrod, honeysuckle, lavender, phlox, yarrow and zinnia. See Wildflowers.
More Tips
Butterflies are very sensitive to chemicals. Try to avoid introducing any foreign element into your garden. Don’t
panic if you find a few holes in the leaves of your garden
plants. This is a normal part of the natural world.
Learn to recognize
the caterpillars that can be serious pests, and only interfere if the damage
is unacceptable. Tomato hornworms, for example, are large caterpillars that
can quickly devour all your tomato plants. Even
though they become very attractive
moths, the damage they cause to food crops can be unacceptable. Luckily,
most caterpillars are not this greedy. It’s a great
thrill to spot an interesting caterpillar and find
that it’s a butterfly larva on a host plant that
you’ve
planted. It could make a chrysalis there, and next year - a butterfly!
Beautiful moths may also visit your garden. The life cycle of a moth also
involves egg-laying on a host plant, with a larva,
or caterpillar growing and making a
pupa (called a chrysalis for butterflies) from which will hatch a moth. The
lovely clearwing hummingbird moth, e.g., requires
honeysuckle for a host plant for its
eggs.
Reprinted & adapted with permission of Peterborough Green Up Association.
The Stratford Public Library can help you learn to recognize different kinds
of caterpillars and butterflies (and moths). You may discover more friends
in your garden than you ever imagined!
Fly to the Stratford Public Library for additional information!
19 St. Andrew Street (519-271-0220) (Click for Website)
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