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What plants do I need to select to create a Kentucky butterfly garden?

Last Updated: September 05, 2008

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One of the most remarkable characteristics of butterfly biology is that these insects undergo a process called complete metamorphosis. This is a fancy way of saying that adults lay eggs; the eggs hatch into larvae (called caterpillars); the caterpillars eat and ultimately pupate to form a chrysalis; and the pupa emerges as an adult to continue the life cycle. The primary advantage of this lifestyle is that it allows the caterpillars and adults to live in different places.

The caterpillar stage is very important - perhaps more important than the adult stage. The adult female lays an egg in the right spot on the right plant for the caterpillar. The caterpillar then eats, and eats, and eats until it pupates. From a gardener's point of view, you must know what plants caterpillars like to eat. By attracting the caterpillars, you will most surely get the adults that will feed on a variety of flowers. Caterpillar food plants should become your garden's foundation plants if you are serious about butterflies.

The following table lists food plants for common Kentucky butterflies.

 






























 Butterfly

Subgroup 

Caterpillar Food 

Adult Food 

Puddles 
Monarch   milkweed  sap, fruit, nectar   
Mourning cloak  

birch, cottonwood, elm, hackberry 

sap, fruit, nectar Yes 
Painted ladies American sunflowers, pussytoes  nectar  Yes 
  Painted Lady sunflowers  nectar  Yes 
Skippers European  grasses  nectar   
  Fiery grasses  nectar   
  Silver Spotted locust, woody legumes  fruit, nectar  Yes 
Swallowtails Black plants in carrot family  nectar  Yes 
  Zebra

hornbeam, paw paw, spicebush, tulip poplar 

nectar Yes 
  Spicebush spicebush, sassafras, tulip poplar  nectar  Yes 
  Tiger hornbean, paw paw, sassafras, spicebush, tulip poplar, wild cherry  nectar Yes
Tawny Emperor   hackberry sap fruit, nectar   
Viceroy  

apple, cottonwood, plum, wild cherry, willow 

sap, fruit, nectar Yes 

Browse related Faqs by tag: horticulture, flowers, kentucky, butterfly


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