Butterfly Gardens for Colorado

The Monarch butterfly is in the news and on almost everyone’s mind.  Monarchs are in trouble. Here’s what scientists from the World Wildlife Fund had to say about them:

The latest decrease in monarch butterflies is likely due to a decrease in the milkweed plant (Asclepias) – a primary food for monarchs – from herbicide use in the butterfly’s reproductive and feeding grounds in the U.S., as well as extreme climate variations during the fall and summer affecting butterfly reproduction.

Omar Vidal, director of the WWF in Mexico said:

Extreme climate fluctuations in the U.S. and Canada affect the survival and reproduction of butterflies. The monarch’s life cycle depends on the climatic conditions in the places where they develop. Eggs, larvae and pupae develop more quickly in milder conditions. Temperatures above 95°F can be lethal for larvae, and eggs dry out in hot, arid conditions, causing a drastic decrease in hatch rate.

The Monarch specialists are urging all of us to plant milkweed this year. Even though Colorado is not on a direct migration path for the Monarch, we do get strays here, and having a milkweed plant for them would not be a bad idea.  This year we’ll have two types of milkweed plants available, Asclepias tuberosa, AKA butterfly weed, a Colorado native and Asclepias curassavica, a beautiful milkweed that is the preferred plant for Monarchs and liked by other butterflies, too. 

My recommendation for the perfect butterfly garden for Colorado? Butterfly bush (Buddleia), milkweed (Asclepias), zinnia, sunflower, aster, parsley, dill, verbena, cosmos and hollyhock.  Whether you group them together, or intersperse them in your garden, you’ll have an excellent habitat for butterflies. The hollyhock, asclepias, verbena, and sunflower are quite drought tolerant, too.  It seems to go without saying, but I’ll say it anyway: if you want to attract butterflies and hummingbirds to your garden, please do not use pesticides!

We found a great chart on the CSU website that lists common Colorado butterflies and their host and nectar plants.  I’ve noticed that here the butterflies seem to love zinnias above almost every other flower.  Swallowtails are one of the most beautiful butterflies and even their caterpillars are cute! I took this picture last summer in the nursery.

 

Food used by common eastern Colorado butterflies and skippers.

Butterfly

Flight period

Caterpillar food

Common nectar plants, adult food

Black swallowtail
(Papilio polyxenes)
April-September Dill, parsley, fennel, carrot Butterfly weed, alfalfa, thistle
Checkered skipper
(Pyrgus communis)
April-October Mallow, hollyhock Verbena, dandelion, Canada thistle, aster
Checkered white
(Pontia protodice)
April-November Tumble mustard Alfafa, mustards, bee balm
Clouded sulfur
(Colias philodice)
April-November Alfalfa, clover Alfalfa, phlox, rabbitbrush, aster, marigold
Edwards fritillary
(Speyeria edwardsii)
June-September Nuttall’s violet Rabbitbrush, gaillardia, bee balm
European cabbage butterfly
(Pieris rapae)
April-October Broccoli, cabbage (mustard family) Many
Gorgone checkerspot
(Charidryas gorgone)
May-September Sunflowers White clover, dandelion, Canada thistle
Gray hairstreak
(Strymon melinus)
May-October Many Many
Hackberry butterfly
(Asterocampa celtis)
May-September Hackberry Rotting fruit, sap flows
Melissa blue
(Lycaeides melissa)
April-October Wild licorice, alfalfa, etc. Bee balm, sweet clover
Monarch
(Danaus plexippus)
June-October Milkweed Cosmos, Canada thistle, rabbitbrush, etc.
Mourning cloak
(Nymphalis antiopa)
February-November Willow, aspen, cottonwood, elm Rabbitbrush, milkweed, sap
Orange sulfur
(Colias eurytheme)
April-October Alfalfa, vetch, pea Alfalfa, marigold, zinnia
Painted Lady
(Vanessa cardui)
April-October Thistle, hollyhock, sunflower Grape hyacinth, cosmos, zinnia, alfalfa, many flowers
Silver-spotted skipper
(Epargyreus clarus)
May-July Wild licorice, locust, etc. Lilac, dogbane, zinnia, sweet pea, Canada thistle
Two-tailed swallowtail
(Papilio multicaudatus)
April-August Green ash, chokecherry Geranium, thistle, milkweed
Variegated fritillary
(Euptoieta claudia)
April-October Various, including pansy Rabbitbrush, Canada thistle
Weidemeyer’s admiral
(Limentitis weidemeyerii)
June-September Willow, aspen, cottonwood Sap flows, snowberry, dung
Western tiger swallowtail
(Papilio rutulus)
May-July Willow, cottonwood, chokecherry Zinnia, lilac, butterflybush, thistle, milkweed
Wood nymph
(Cercyonis pegala)
June-August Grasses Rabbitbrush, clematis, Canada thistle

To read more about butterflies on the CSU site, go here  http://www.ext.colostate.edu/pubs/insect/05504.html

 

 

 

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