CENTRAL OHIO by Jim Davidson

Similar documents
MALIBU/SANTA MONICA MOUNTAINS, CALIFORNIA by Sandy Russell

PPA NATIVE PLANT SALE 2015

2016 Healthy Yards Plant Guide

Gardening with West Virginia Native Plants WVNPS 2012

Plants that serve as larval hosts for butterflies and skippers:

Ornamental and Native Plants for the Rain Garden. Madeline Flahive DiNardo County Agricultural Agent Rutgers Cooperative Extension of Union County

Wild Meadows HOA Annual Meeting January 25, 2006

A Rain Garden for Sun Plants set into a rain garden that gets full sun must be able to endure both occasional flooding and dry spells.

Florida Native Plant Society

Tips on Raising Viceroys, Purples, and Admirals. Presented by Todd L. Stout

Recommended Plantings to Attract Hummingbirds, Butterflies, & Moths by Patricia Sutton

SOUTHERN LOUISIANA by Gary Noel Ross and Frances Welden

Cercis Ruby Falls. Origin: Redbud breeding program at NCSU Species: Cercis canadensis Protection Status: US PPAF

Can you see the difference between wind pollinated and insect pollinated flowers?

Introduction to Iowa Native Prairie ie Plants 1

Deciduous Forest. Courtesy of Wayne Herron and Cindy Brady, U.S. Department of Agriculture Forest Service

The Wonderful World of Wetlands BINGO

Whether you have a balcony garden,

Oak Trees BASIC GROWING REQUIREMENTS FOR YOUR

Teaching Instructions

How to make a Solitary Bee Box

Monarch Butterflies: Beautiful But Poisonous by Kelly Hashway

2008 Bulletproof Perennials for the Redding Area

Pantone Matching System Color Chart PMS Colors Used For Printing

How To Color Print

A Guide to Growing a School Butterfly Garden

Scientific Inquiry: What is inquiry-based learning?

Waterwise Landscaping: Designing a Drought-tolerant (and deer-resistant) Landscape and Garden

Moses Creek Savanna Management Plan

Life Cycle of a Butterfly

Questions for Discussion. Introduction. What is ph? Neutralization

A DISCOVERY REGARDING THE DEATH OF ASH TREES IN THE PLYMOUTH AREA

Summary of Pre- and Post-Project Vegetation Survey Results

Controlling Invasive Plants and Animals in our Community

Apricot Tree Prunus armeniaca

Butterfly Gardening for Louisianians

Managing Black Walnut

Tree Diversity Activity

Gaillardia x grandiflora Arizona Sun North American Native Cultivar

Reference: Remediation Plan for Areas of Vegetation Removal at the Cedar Point Wind Farm

Common Backyard Birds of Alabama

Designing and Planting for Trees for Bees

ANIMALS AND THEIR HABITATS: KS1 STUDENT RESOURCES

The Simple Truth: We Can t Live Without Them

NATIVE PLANT LIST. ~Sun, Dry Soil~ SMALL SHRUBS (<6 )

Selecting. Plants. for. Pollinators

Climate, Vegetation, and Landforms

PANTONE Solid to Process

Pollen Allergy. Patient Information

Butterfly or Moth? Made for 2nd Graders... Project Bibliography

A GARDEN FOR BUTTERFLIES

Ecosystem services, biodiversity and aesthetic delight

Best Plants for Problem Clay Soils: Perennials

Mason bee hosting workshop

Rain Gardens: Designing your Landscape to Protect Aquatic Resources. Curtis Hinman WSU Extension Faculty Watershed Ecologist

Wildlifer 2013 Managing Wildlife on Private Lands

ELEMENTARY-LEVEL SCIENCE TEST

How To Plan A Buffer Zone

Plants that Like Wet Feet

Invasive Tree Species

Brede High Woods. Butterflies. Educational Resources. Unit in brief

Florida Beekeeping Management Calendar 1

GENERAL WATERING & CARE GUIDE

Trees help us experience connections with our natural heritage and with our most deeply held spiritual and cultural values.

Materials For each student (or group of students): Caterpillar data sheets Pencil For teacher: Chart paper Markers

This leaflet gives advice on sensible precautions to help avoid the problem and the first steps to take if damage still occurs.

The Effects of Hydrochloric Acid Concentrations on the Growth of the Plant Brassica Rapa. Worcester State College

TEXAS SMARTSCAPE Landscape Design

USDA TO PUT 400 FARMERS OUT OF BUSINESS AND TAKE MONARCHS AWAY FROM SCHOOL KIDS TO PROTECT WEED PLANT IN ARIZONA

Drought in the Czech Republic in 2015 A preliminary summary

PANTONE Coated Color Reference

Integrating Bird Conservation and Natural Resources Management: Best Management Practices. Jennifer Devlin, City of Portland, Environmental Services

JANUARY 1 JANUARY 2 JANUARY 3. Possible First Occurrences Today. Possible First Occurrences Today. Possible First Occurrences Today

Division of Forestry

The Alfalfa Weevil in Utah

Where Do Birds Live?

DEVELOPMENT GUIDELINES OAK TREES CARE AND MAINTENANCE

Worksheets. (Caterpillars of Singapore s Butterflies) Worksheet Title Recommended level. Adaptations of the caterpillar defence mechanism

FireSmart. A Guide to Landscaping Practices that Protect Your Home from Wildfire

Weather Help - NEXRAD Radar Maps. Base Reflectivity

SELL CUT FLOWERS FROM PERENNIAL SUMMER-FLOWERING BULBS Andy Hankins Extension Specialist-Alternative Agriculture, Virginia State University

Exploring Seed Germination by Brad Williamson

The Butterfly Life Cycle

A Guide to the Native Milkweeds of Oregon

Central Oregon Climate and how it relates to gardening

April s Featured Plants

Promoting Pollination Farming for Native Bees

Consumer Horticulture

NATURAL REGIONS OF KENTUCKY

Life Cycle - Butterflies & Moths

Transcription:

by Jim Davidson TOP BUTTERFLY NECTAR FLOWERS A number in front of a flower name indicates the priority of recommendation (1 = most recommended). For "BLOOM SEASON," S = spring, X = summer, F = fall, with < meaning earlier in the season, m the middle of the season, and > late in the season. Abbreviations: A = alien species, N = native species. BLOOM ATTRACTED FLOWER HEIGHT COLOR SEASON BUTTERFLIES COMMENTS N 12 Black-eyed Susan 2 yellow <X Northern Metalmark easy to grow, but Rudbeckia hirta Great Spangled Fritillary to get metalmark, Pearl Crescent must be near its food plant, roundleaved ragwort (Senecio obovatus) N 2 Butterfly milkweed 30" orange <X Swallowtails doesn t like compe- Asclepias tuberosa Hairstreaks tition; tolerates Great Spangled Fritillary dryness; comes up Pearl Crescent late in spring (leave space for it) N 12 Buttonbush 6-10 white <X Skippers, including to attract wetland Cephalanthus occidentalis Mulberry Wing & skippers, plant near Black Dash a wetland N 10 Swamp milkweed 4 pink <X Swallowtails needs water but Asclepias incarnata Fritillaries does ok in garden Skippers N 6 Wild bergamot 2-3 lavendar <X Fritillaries easy Monarda fistulosa Hummingbird Sphinx Moth N 7 Joe-pye-weeds 4-8 mauve X Swallowtails lives in wet Eupatorium meadows A 5 Mexican sunflower 8 orange X Swallowtails annual; attracts Tithonia rotundifolia Monarchs hummingbirds N 11 Mistflower 2 blue X Peck s Skipper sprouts late (leave Eupatorium coelestinum room for it) A 1 Butterfly bush 4-8 various X-F many cover base with Buddleia davidii leaves in late Nov. N 8 Dense blazingstar 4-5 purple X-F Skippers for wet places Liatris spicata

TOP BUTTERFLY NECTAR FLOWERS BLOOM ATTRACTED FLOWER HEIGHT COLOR SEASON BUTTERFLIES COMMENTS N 3 Purple coneflower 3 purple mx Fritillaries doesn t like compe- Echinacea purpurea Monarch tition; tolerates dryness N 4 New England aster 3-4 purple >X Pearl Crescent easy; can crowd Aster novae-angliae Monarch out other plants N 9 Rough blazingstar 4-5 purple >X-F Skippers, especially for dry, sandy, Liatris aspera Leonard s Skipper well-drained places NECTAR FLOWERS THAT DON T WORK IN THIS REGION Abbreviations: A = alien species, N = native species. FLOWER COMMENTS A Dwarf butterfly bush Buddleia davidii Some dwarf cultivars have no scent and no nectar; they look good but butterflies ignore them. (Note: Some dwarf varieties work very well.) A Lantana Lantana This seems to be a magnet for butterflies in the South but doesn t seem to work in this region. TOP CATERPILLAR FOOD PLANTS A number in front of a plant name indicates a particularly recommended plant (1 = most recommended). Abbreviations: A = alien species, N = native species. NAME HEIGHT BUTTERFLY CATERPILLARS COMMENTS N 1 Butterfly milkweed 30" Monarch See nectar flowers. Asclepias tuberosa A 2 Fennel 4 Black Swallowtail Foeniculum vulgare N Swamp lousewort 3 Baltimore Checkerspot needs wet places Pedicularis lanceolata N Swamp milkweed 4 Monarch See nectar flowers. Asclepias incarnata N Turtlehead 4 Baltimore Checkerspot needs wet places Chelone glabra

TOP CATERPILLAR FOOD PLANTS NAME HEIGHT BUTTERFLY CATERPILLARS COMMENTS N Wood betony 10" Baltimore Checkerspot grows in wet & dry Pedicularis canadensis places; doesn t like competition COMMON BUTTERFLIES FOR YOUR GARDEN & YARD A number in front of a butterfly name indicates a particularly likely species (1 = most expected to be seen). Numbers in "FLIGHT PERIOD" and "CATERPILLAR SEASON" correspond to the month (4 = April, 5 = May, etc.), with < meaning earlier in the month, m the middle of the month, and > late in the month. NAME PERIOD SEASON FOOD PLANTS 1 Eastern Tiger Swallowtail 4-9 4-9 ashes, sassafras, tulip tree, wild black Papilio glaucus cherry 3 Spicebush Swallowtail 4-9 4-9 sassafras, spicebush Papilio troilus 1 Cabbage White 4-10 4-10 cabbage (mustard) family Pieris rapae 1 Clouded Sulphur m4-11 5-11 clovers Colias philodice 1 Orange Sulphur >4-11 5-11 alfalfa and other legumes Colias eurytheme Spring Azure 4-<9 4-9 dogwoods, wingstem Celastrina ladon 2 Great Spangled Fritillary 6-9 4-5 violets Speyeria cybele Pearl Crescent 4-m10 4-10 asters Phyciodes tharos Question Mark 5-10 5-9 elms, hops, nettles Polygonia interrogationis Eastern Comma 4-10 5-9 elms, hops, nettles Polygonia comma Milbert s Tortoiseshell 5-10 5-9 nettles Nymphalis milberti Red Admiral 5-9 5-9 nettles Vanessa atalanta Red-spotted Purple m5-m9 6-9 wild black cherry, also Limenitis arthemis (astyanax) aspens, poplars, oaks Viceroy 6-9 6-9 willows Limenitis archippus 3

COMMON BUTTERFLIES FOR YOUR GARDEN & YARD NAME PERIOD SEASON FOOD PLANTS Northern Pearly-Eye 5-8 4-7 grasses Enodia anthedon 1 Monarch 5-10 5-10 milkweeds Danaus plexippus LOCAL & UNUSUAL BUTTERFLIES FOR YOUR GARDEN & YARD Numbers in "FLIGHT PERIOD" and "CATERPILLAR SEASON" correspond to the month (4 = April, 5 = May, etc.), with < meaning earlier in the month, m the middle of the month, and > late in the month. NAME PERIOD SEASON FOOD PLANTS COMMENTS Giant Swallowtail 5-9 5-9 prickly ash Papilio cresphontes Baltimore Checkerspot 6 5,7 swamp lousewort, eggs laid in Euphydryas phaeton turtlehead clusters in June; larvae feed in webs in July Broad-winged Skipper 7 5-6 sedges a wetland skipper Poanes viator Dion Skipper 7 5-6 sedges a wetland skipper Euphyes dion Duke s Skipper 7 5-6 sedges a wetland skipper Euphyes dukesi GENERAL COMMENTS ABOUT GARDENING IN THIS REGION USDA ZONE: 5/6 Many areas in this region have soils with much clay. More lime (alkaline) soils occur wet of Columbus (in glaciated areas). The topography is rather flat, dissected by streams. All four seasons occur here, each about three months long. The climate has precipitation (rain and snow) distributed throughout the year to favor dominance of trees if left undisturbed. It is warm enough for butterfly bush to overwinter here if mulched (protected) over winter. The flowers of the alien purple loosestrife (Lythrum salicaria) are very attractive to swallowtails but should be kept away from wetlands where it is very invasive. Because it can aggressively spread and crowd out native plants, horticultural use of this plant may be banned in your area. Copyright 1996 by the North American Butterfly Association, Inc. All rights reserved. 4

5