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Growing A Butterfly Garden at Coastal Maine Botanical Gardens

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Slide presentation for CMBG education class on August 15, 2014. Class prepared by Rodney Eason for continuing education at Coastal Maine Botanical Gardens.

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Page 1: Growing A Butterfly Garden at Coastal Maine Botanical Gardens
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Which Butterflies Are We Likely To Enounter?

• Swallowtails (Papilionidae)• Whites and Sulphurs (Family Pieridae)• Gossamer Wings (Family Lycaenidae)• Snout Butterflies (Family Libytheidae)• Hackberry Butterflies (Family Apaturidae)• Brush-Footed Butterflies (Family Nymphalidae)• Satyrs (Family Satyridae)• Milkweed Butterflies (Family Danaidae)• Skippers (Family Hesperiidae)

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Swallowtails of Maine

• Black Swallowtail

• Canadian Tiger Swallowtail

• Eastern Tiger Swallowtail

• Giant Swallowtail

• Pipevine Swallowtail

• Spicebush Swallowtail

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• Cabbage White

• Clouded Sulphur

• Alfalfa Sulphur

Whites and Sulphurs of

Maine

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• American Copper

• Brown Elfin

• Gray Hairstreak

• Banded Hairstreak

• Various blues

Gossamer Wings of

Maine

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• Question mark

• Comma

• Mourning cloak

• Milbert’s tortoiseshell

Brush-footed Butterflies of

Maine

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• Red-spotted purple

• Viceroy

• White admiral

• Baltimore

• Pearl crescent

Brush-footed Butterflies of

Maine

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• Buckeye• Painted lady• Red admiral• American painted lady• Great spangled fritillary• Meadow fritillary

Brush-footed Butterflies of

Maine

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• Ringlet

• Little wood satyr

• Northern eyed brown

• Common wood nymph

Satyrs of Maine

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• Monarch

Milkweed Butterfly of

Maine

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• European skipper

• Silver-spotted skipper

Skippers of Maine

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Butterfly 101

• Butterflies, Skippers, and Moths are in the Lepidoptera group which means scaly wings

• Butterflies have clubbed antennae, moths have featherlike antennae

• Butterflies undergo four different life stages. The entire process is called metamorphosis. The four stages are: egg, caterpillar, pupa, butterfly

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Butterfly 101

• Butterflies generally need temperatures above 70 degrees to progress through metamorphosis and fly.

• Eggs can lay dormant until warmth comes.

• Butterflies will stay still and use their wings almost like solar collectors to warm their body.

• Eggs are laid by the mother on plants the caterpillar can eat.

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Butterfly 101

• Mother butterflies can find the proper plant by sight, taste, or scratching the leaf surface to release a scent

• Eggs take around a week to hatch into a caterpillar under good conditions.

• A caterpillar eats its egg casing and then begins a journey of eating and growing.

• A caterpillar will expand 4-6 times (called instars)

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Butterfly 101

• The size of the butterfly is determined by the size of the caterpillar during its last instar phase.

• Caterpillars eat and grow for 2-4 weeks.

• They are born with all of the body parts to pupate into a butterfly.

• The pupa is in a chrysalis form for around 2 weeks (butterfly transformation)

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Page 31: Growing A Butterfly Garden at Coastal Maine Botanical Gardens

Butterfly 101

• Butterflies are looking for nectar and to reproduce

• They can determine flowers and mates visually and by pheromones.

• Butterflies can see the colors that humans see plus they can see ultraviolet colors. They use ultraviolet to find mates and flowers for nectar.

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Butterfly 101

• I had been told years ago that butterflies need a water source as well. To be more accurate, they need a puddle. The puddle allows butterflies to obtain the micronutrients including sodium that they cannot get via nectar.

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Larval Foods

• Swallowtails: pipevines, Queen Anne’s lace, dill, parsley, ash, hornbeam, sassafras, spicebush

• Whites: mustards including cabbage and broccoli

• Sulphurs: alfalfa, clovers, vetch

• Coppers: sorrel, docks

• Hairstreaks: blueberries, bearberries, oaks, hickories, butternut, legumes

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Larval Foods

• Blues: dogwood, wild cherry, meadowsweet, legumes

• Anglewings and tortoiseshells: nettles, hops, elms, willows, birch, hackberries

• Most brushfooted: composites such as asters, thistles, plantains, snapdragons, turtleheads

• Satyrs: grasses and sedges

• Monarch: milkweeds

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Larval Foods

• Skippers: locust, legumes, grasses, legumes

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Butterfly Nectar Plants

Annuals:

Ageratum

Cosmos

Heliotrope

Lantana

Lunaria

Marigold

Sunflower

Nicotiana

Pentas

Petunia

Scabiosa

Statice

Verbena

Zinnia

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Butterfly Nectar Plants

Perennials:

Early:

Allium

Arabis

Aubrieta

Chives

Dame’s rocket

Forget-me-not

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Butterfly Nectar Plants

Perennials:Midseason:Bee balmBlack-eyed SusanButterfly weedCatmintCoreopsisDaisiesDaylilyGaillardiaLavender

LiatrisLilyMenthaPhloxEchinaceaCentranthusRosemarySunflowerVeronicaYarrow

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Butterfly Nectar Plants

Perennials

Late:

Aster

Globe thistle

Physostegia

Sedum

Sneezeweed

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Butterfly Nectar Plants

Wildflowers:

Early:

Clover

Dandelion

Hawkweed

Winter cress

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Butterfly Nectar Plants

Wildflowers

Midseason:

Butterfly weed

Daisies

Dogbane

Milkweed

Mountain mint

Pearly everlasting

Queen Anne’s lace

Thistle

Vetch

Wild bergamot

Yarrow

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Butterfly Nectar Plants

Wildflowers

Late:

Aster

Beggar ticks

Boneset

Goldenrod

Ironweed

Joe-pye weed

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Butterfly Nectar Plants

Shrubs

Early:

Lilac

Rhododendron

Spicebush

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Butterfly Nectar Plants

Shrubs

Midseason:

Butterfly bush

Buttonbush

New Jersey tea

Clethra

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Butterfly Nectar Plants

Shrubs

Late:

Bluebeard

Clethra

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Butterfly Nectar Plants

Trees

Aesculus

Tree lilac

Prunus spp.

Salix spp.

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Top 10 Nectar Plants for Butterflies

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Rudbeckia spp.

Photo by William Cullina

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Eupatorium spp.

Photo by William Cullina

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Liatris spp.

Photo by William Cullina

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Coreopsis spp.

Photo by William Cullina

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Pentas spp.

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Aster spp.

Photo by William Cullina

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Asclepias spp.

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Lantana spp.

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Echinacea spp.

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Buddleia spp.

Photo by William Cullina

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References and Nurseries

• Andrew Brand and Broken Arrow Nurseries (he is teaching the next class!!!)

• Broken Arrow Nursery (CT)

• Van Berkum (NH)

• High Country Gardens (NM)

• Plant Delights (NC)

• Rare Find (NJ)

• Landcraft (wholesale only)

• Boothbay Region Greenhouses (heah)

• Opus Nursery (RI)

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Various References