There are a number of reasons why people garden. Some people want things to eat, some want flowers, and a number of people do it just to satisfy the expectation that the landscape has plants in it. Chances are that no matter what your reason is, you spend time making choices about what to plant. It’s a point that I’ve tried to make many times: what you plant can really matter. Today’s post is about choosing host plants, a choice that allows you to actually contribute to creating new life through your landscape.
Spicebush caterpillar |
Host plants are those used by insect herbivores (those that eat leaves such as the caterpillars of moths and butterflies). While some insect herbivores are specialists (limited host plants) and others are generalists (have several different host plants), the important point is that these insects do have relationships with plants and without their special plants, they can’t make more.
Spicebush butterfly |
Since most people are interesting in supporting butterflies, I will focus this post on them. Keep in mind that if you include a number of “keystone” plants in addition to what I mention here, you will likely support hundreds of species of butterflies and moths.
Georgia is home to over 160 species of butterflies.
Butterflies include large and well-known species like the Monarch butterfly and
our state butterfly, the Eastern Tiger swallowtail; medium-sized species like the
American lady, the Gulf fritillary, and the Cloudless sulphur; small species
like hairstreaks and azures; and all the ones known as skippers. With careful
plant selection, the average residential landscape can support close to 30 of
them by providing host plants. Some plants support multiple species. The following table is available as a PDF file here.
Butterfly |
Native
Host Plants |
Eastern Tiger swallowtail |
Tuliptree (Liriodendron tulipifera), native cherries and plums (Prunus), ash (Fraxinus), or sweetbay magnolia (Magnolia virginiana). |
Spicebush swallowtail |
Spicebush (Lindera benzoin), Sassafras, tuliptree (Liriodendron), sweetbay magnolia (M. virginiana) |
Eastern Black swallowtail |
Golden Alexander (Zizia), Angelica, meadow parsnip (Thaspium), and other parsley-family members (Apiaceae). Note: parsley, fennel are non-native hosts. |
Pipevine swallowtail |
Woolly pipevine (Aristolochia tomentosa), Virginia snakeroot (Aristolochia serpentaria) |
Zebra swallowtail |
Paw paw (Asimina triloba) |
Giant swallowtail |
Wafer-ash/hop-tree (Ptelea trifoliata), Hercules club & prickly ash (Zanthoxylum sp.) |
Palamedes swallowtail |
Redbay (Persea borbonia) and plants in the Laurel family (Lauraceae) |
Red-spotted Purple |
Black cherry (Prunus serotina), hawthorns (Crataegus), oaks (Quercus), serviceberry (Amelanchier), and willow (Salix) |
Monarch Queen |
Milkweed (Asclepias sp.) |
Hackberry Emperor American snout |
Hackberry (Celtis sp.) |
American lady |
Cudweed (Pseudognaphalium) and pussytoes (Antennaria) |
Painted lady |
Native thistles (Cirsium) and members of the mallow family |
Red Admiral Question mark Eastern comma |
Nettles (Urtica) and false nettle (Boehmeria cylindrical) |
Silver-spotted skipper Long-tailed skipper |
Pea family plants like butterfly pea (Clitoria mariana) and Amorpha and American wisteria (Wisteria frustescens) |
Viceroy Mourning cloak |
Willow (Salix) |
Common buckeye |
Plantain (Plantago), native wild petunia (Ruellia), and purple false foxglove (Agalinis) |
Gulf fritillary Zebra longwing |
Passionvine (Passiflora) |
Variegated fritillary |
Passionvine (Passiflora), Violets (Viola) |
Great Spangled fritillary |
Violets (Viola) |
Cloudless sulphur |
Partridge pea (Chamaecrista sp.) and Senna |
Red-banded hairstreak |
Sumac (Rhus sp.) |
Summer azure |
Dogwood (Cornus sp.), NJ Tea (Ceanothus americanus) and wingstem (Verbesina alternifolia) |
Carolina satyr Fiery skipper Zabulon skipper |
Various native grasses |
A fresh monarch is ready to go south |
Black swallowtail newly emerged |
Tallamy's lectures were actually how I found your blog! It was very inspiring. I have a question, maybe you can help clarify. In the links you posted to the "keystone" plants, when the latin name is listed, for example, Helianthus or Quercus, would ANY species of those groups be appropriate to plant? There are so many types of sunflowers and oaks out there and I'm wondering if my selection of variety matters or if planting any sort of sunflower or oak is virtually the same as far as insects are concerned. Thanks for your help!
ReplyDeleteYes, Josh, as far as we know, you can choose any regionally appropriate member of that genus.
DeleteThank you, Ellen! I have been trying to write down this exact info but having trouble bringing it all together. This list is exactly what I needed for my next round of planting - now all I have to research is if there is a specific species of each plant that is native to NW GA. I grew Partridge Pea for the first time this summer and had a lot of Scarlet Sage also, and we have seen so many Cloudless Sulphurs! Ditto for Golden Alexanders (zizia), Fennel, and Black Swallowtails. NOTE: Every time I go to usinggeorgianativeplants.blogspot.com, Norton tells me it is an unsafe site. Best Wishes to you, and thanks for all you do!
ReplyDeleteIt might be because it isn't https---which a lot of sites aren't. Mine isn't because I haven't wanted to pay my hosting site to have that certificate.
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