Los Angeles Times

BUTTERFLY VISIONS WILL SOON TAKE FLIGHT

MONARCH-ATTRACTING NATIVE MILKWEEDS NEED TIME TO BLOOM

- BY JEANETTE MARANTOS

BUTTERFLY fans, take a breath. I know it’s officially spring and we’re all pounding on nursery doors, anxious to plant some California native milkweed to help the endangered Western monarch butterfly stay afloat since milkweed is the only thing its caterpilla­rs will eat and nonnative varieties appear to be hastening its demise.

But here’s the thing: Native milkweeds are still slowly coming back to life.

Native milkweeds — especially narrow-leaf milkweed, the most prominent variety in California — are just now emerging from dormancy, a normal, natural thing that won’t be hurried, said Patty Roess, manager of the retail portion of the Tree of Life Nursery in San Juan Capistrano, one of Southern California’s premier growers of native plants.

“We’ve tried growing native milkweed in different conditions, and it’s the same. You can’t change what the plant wants to be: a summer bloomer that goes dormant in midwinter.” That means the plants big enough to sell won’t be available at most Southern California nurseries until mid-April — earlier if we get a couple of really warm weeks or later if the weather stays cool. And because of the heavy demand this year and lots of pre-orders, nursery managers are warning that it might be May or even early summer before they’ll have more native milkweed in stock.

“All our April crop is already reserved out — we’re talking hundreds of plants — and we’re already taking reservatio­ns for our May crop,” said Su Kraus, founder and advisor to Moosa Creek Nursery, a wholesale grower of California native plants in Valley Center near San Diego.

El Nativo Growers, a wholesale native plant grower in Azusa, has seen such demand for native milkweed “that we sold out [to retailers] very, very early this season, before the plants even emerged from dormancy,” said co-owner James Campbell. “We’re trying to ramp up production.”

Some people are so eager that they’ve been buying pots of dormant narrow-leaf milkweed, a.k.a. Asclepias fascicular­is, at the Santa Barbara Botanic Garden nursery, says manager Matt Straka. “It looks like just dirt and maybe a twig, and sometimes there isn’t even a twig,” Straka said. “But if you pop the ‘plant’ out of the pot and see white roots along the edge of the soil, that’s a good sign it’s alive but in the dormant stage.”

All this demand is good news, right? Because people are really trying to help the migratory Western monarch, whose numbers sank below 2,000 during last year’s Thanksgivi­ng weekend count, down from the millions that used to winter on the California coast some 30 years ago. Since that disastrous count, the Xerces Society for Invertebra­te Conservati­on has issued a “call to action,” outlining ways the public can help. And two bills were introduced in Congress in midMarch to help fund monarch habitat restoratio­n and preservati­on.

Feel free to skip to our list of eight places you can purchase milkweeds native to Southern California along with other flowering native plants that provide food for adult monarchs. Because of the demand, you may have to make an advance order at these locations or with your local nursery (lobby them hard if they don’t already sell native milkweed). And be patient, since many nurseries are short staffed, beleaguere­d by phone calls and orders, and trying to deal with the evolving pandemic like the rest of us.

But if you’re a plant wonk like me, let’s talk about the Western monarch situation and why a seemingly simple thing like milkweed poses such a challenge.

When things get unbalanced in the natural world, the “solutions” are often more complicate­d than we have time — or the inclinatio­n — to process, and they’re fluid. Researcher­s get new data and slowly develop new theories, but most of us are impatient. We want to act, do something to help, and we usually grab for the simplest solutions, not realizing that sometimes we’re just making things worse.

Consider milkweed for instance, the sole food for monarch caterpilla­rs. Herbicides and weed eradicatio­n programs around roads and farmlands have decimated much of the wild milkweed in California.

People became concerned about the monarch’s plight and nursery wholesaler­s began growing lots of tropical milkweed (Asclepias curassavic­a) for Southern California­n gardeners decades ago. It’s one of the prettiest milkweed varieties, with long thin leaves and thick clusters of orange and yellow blooms, more like an ornamental plant than a classic weed. SoCal gardeners readily added the plants to their yards to help the butterflie­s and get a frontrow seat to the wonder of metamorpho­sis, from tiny egg to caterpilla­r to cocoon to butterfly.

Which brings us to the reason why tropical milkweed is such a problem in Southern California. See, tropical milkweed works fine as caterpilla­r food in colder parts of the United States, when it dies back during the winter, killing

The following Southern California nurseries specialize in native plants and expect to have at least narrow-leaf milkweed available by mid-April. This is not a complete list; to check for more native plant growers in your area, visit the California Native Plant Society’s CalScape website and check with your local retail nurseries to see whether and when they will be selling native milkweed and/or other flowering native plants.

any parasites that live on the plants. But in Southern California tropical milkweed stays green and blooming year round. Xerces Society researcher­s believe this evergreen milkweed confuses normal monarch migration and allows harmful microscopi­c parasites — Ophryocyst­is elektrosci­rrha, or OE — to multiply on the plants. Monarch caterpilla­rs end up eating a lot of this nasty parasite as they devour the leaves and researcher­s believe OE is sickening the adults, messing up their lifespans, migration patterns and ability to reproduce.

Remember: Pink is good,

orange is bad So in the simplest terms, butterfly experts say California native milkweeds, with their pink, white and cream-colored flowers are the only milkweeds we should be planting in Southern California, because they typically go dormant around December (meaning the tops of the plants die back but the roots stay alive), and regrow when things warm up in the spring, around April or May. In fact, one of the region’s largest nurseries, Roger’s Gardens in Corona del Mar stopped selling tropical milkweed a couple of years ago. The nursery only sells native milkweed now and will once again offer its milkweed exchange program sometime in April, giving customers one free narrowleaf milkweed plant in exchange for a tropical milkweed plant they’ve pulled from their yard, says General Manager Ron Vanderhoff.

You can find a list and photos of the native milkweeds that grow best in your region on the Xerces Society website. Narrow-leaf is the most commonly offered plant at nurseries, but some might also have other varieties, such as the pink-flowered showy milkweed (Asclepias speciosa), woollypod milkweed (Asclepias eriocarpa) with its clusters of creamcolor­ed blooms, and the purple-flowered California milkweed (Asclepias californic­a).

But not in coastal areas The Xerces Society now warns against planting any milkweed in SoCal’s coastal areas because even native milkweeds stay green during the mild winters, allowing parasites to multiply. Instead, it recommends that people in coastal areas, especially within five miles of overwinter­ing sites, focus on California native plants that bloom in the winter (November-January) and/or early spring (February-April), to provide nectar for the adult monarch butterflie­s when they need it most. (Interestin­g note from the Xerces Society’s publicatio­n Protecting California’s Butterfly Groves: Monarchs need temperatur­es of 55 degrees or higher to be able to fly, and can only crawl helplessly on the ground if they are unlucky enough to fall from their perch. This is why they tend to cluster on certain trees in mild coastal areas, looking for spots that shelter them from wind, rain and predators while still providing enough warmth in the day so they can fly to find food.)

Organic only It’s critical to make sure the native plants you buy are grown organicall­y, without pesticides. Milkweeds are the monarch caterpilla­r’s sole food, but they are also a magnet to orange-colored aphids, which are unsightly but harmless to the plant and caterpilla­rs, growers say. Some commercial growers use a systemic chemical pesticide on their milkweed to discourage aphids, but that also makes the plant toxic to the caterpilla­rs. Customers need to be sure they’re buying from “specialize­d growers, who know how to control aphids without using harmful chemicals,” said Moosa Creek owner Jose Cohen.

It’s food, not decoration An important note here: Aphids might look yucky but remember, we’re planting native milkweed to create habitat for monarch caterpilla­rs, not decorate our yards. “You’re not growing this for prizewinni­ng flowers,” Straka says.

“People need to know that some bugs are OK to have but they should expect that the caterpilla­rs and the aphids will totally decimate their narrow-leaf milkweed. They’re going to eat this thing to the stems, but that’s OK because it’s a food source.”

The good news is that gardeners should also be planting lots of nectar-producing native plants as well, to attract and sustain the monarch adults. So if you’re worried about bedraggled-looking milkweed in your yard, surround those plants with beautiful flowering native shrubs and perennials, such as buckwheats, salvias, sunflowers and yarrow. For more specifics, check out the Xerces Society’s list of native monarch nectar plants for California.

You can also check in with the Tree of Life Nursery about its butterfly bundle kits of six monarch-friendly native plants, coming May 3, and the Theodore Payne Foundation, which is selling $60 monarch habitat kits at its Sun Valley nursery with everything you need to grow narrow-leaf milkweed and three native nectar plants from seeds. (The kits are too heavy to ship, says director Evan Meyer, so they are only available at the store.)

 ?? Ross May Los Angeles Times; Getty ??
Ross May Los Angeles Times; Getty

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