Thank you, remarkable readers! Dear Avant Gardener now has more than 6,000 subscribers. I’m thrilled that so many are enjoying its mix of ecological research and landscaping advice.
Special thanks to those who responded to my calls for questions. You challenge me to dig deep into the latest research for answers.
I’m deeply interested in your plans, experiments, joys, and lessons. Please tell me about them by responding to this week’s poll, below.
Dear Avant Gardener, I love butterflies! I’d like to fill my yard with them. What should I plant? Is milkweed the best? — IRL, Not a Tattoo
Do you want to give them a meal or a home? Adult butterflies flock to many flowering plants to feed on their nectar, but their caterpillars are picky eaters — often only able to survive on the leaves of a few specific native host plants. Milkweeds are a must-have because they both provide nectar for many butterflies (and bees) and host monarchs, an endangered species.
Many spectacular butterflies rely on host plants without the pretty flowers usually planted in pollinator gardens. For example, great spangled fritillaries won’t survive without modest violets and giant swallowtails require native poplar (Populus spp.) or ash (Fraxinus spp.) trees.
To invite butterflies for a meal, plant nectar plants. If you want to give butterflies a home, then also plant the hosts that feed their caterpillars. Below in “Wow!” are more large, showy, wide-ranging butterflies with hosts to plant to make your yard a butterfly habitat.
— The Avant Gardener
Why, How, Wow!
Why?
Warming climates — plus pesticides and development — are decimating butterflies. Populations in the American west have been hardest hit. According to one study of 450 butterfly species, western monarchs have declined 99.9% since the 1980s. And other species have fared even worse.
The authors suggest fall temperature increases may not only induce physiological stress on butterflies but may influence development and hibernation preparation. Warmer fall temperatures can also reduce the availability of food or host plants, and extend the length of time butterflies' natural enemies are active. — Science Daily
How
You can help reverse the decline of butterflies by creating habitat in your yard:
Site your garden in a sunny area, sheltered from the wind, with rocks or stepping stones for sunning.
Plant a variety of host plants — see suggestions below.
Plant locally native nectar plants in groups (butterflies are nearsighted).
Provide a container of moist mud or sand for “puddling.”
Don’t plant invasive “butterfly bush”; do plant “butterfly weed,” a species of milkweed.
No pesticides! Butterflies are insects (duh).
Wow!
Here (and above) are my personal host plant recommendations for 10 showy butterflies found throughout the United States. As always, make sure to plant native species.
Related Resources
Looking for locally appropriate nectar plants? Download one of Xerces Society’s excellent regional nectar plant guides.
Want more host plant options? Set your location, then search for specific butterflies in National Wildlife Foundations Plant Finder.
Want to plant milkweed for monarchs? Learn how in The Best Monarch Garden Design Isn’t What You Think.
Readers Respond
Please help me plan future columns that you’ll enjoy by responding to these two questions.
Please elaborate in a comment below or by email to DearAvantGardener@gmail.com.
Also, consider sharing this column to help me get the word out about ecological landscaping.
Yes, since I wrote a book called Butterfly Baby meets Mr. and Mrs. Toad at Siler Forest Pond I have been trying to turn my tiny city back yard into a garden. Books inspire the writer as well as the reader. It is slowly working. While watering this spring I've seen an Eastern Tiger Swallowtail, a huge dragonfly and another butterfly I couldn't name but was a sort of monarch look-a-like but with some other markings. Next I will try to transform the front yard as well. The fertilizer is compost and vermiculture, no chemicals. Feels like a haven even for humans.
My backyard birds and rabbits seem to find so many bugs and edibles in my lawn. Although I’d like to reduce my lawn size, does a lawn without lawn chemicals applied offer some benefits to wildlife that we should recognize?