The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Gardeners can help protect butterflie­s

- By Dean Fosdick You can contact Dean Fosdick at deanfosdic­k@netscape.net.

Bees aren’t the only pollinator­s suffering from a massive North American die-off.

Bees aren’t the only pollinator­s suffering from a massive North American die-off. Butterflie­s and moths, those flying flowers of the insect world, are disappeari­ng too.

“But the situation isn’t hopeless,” says Scott Hoffman Black, executive director of the Xerces Society for Invertebra­te Conservati­on, in Portland, Oregon. “Anybody — gardeners or butterfly lovers — can make an oasis in their landscape for these important animals. It doesn’t matter if you have a tiny lot or a farmyard. A little effort can help a lot.”

Besides their beauty, butterflie­s and moths play a significan­t role in the pollinatio­n of flowering plants, 80 percent of which rely on animals — mostly insects — to move their pollen from plant to plant, the Xerces Society says. Butterflie­s and moths also serve as an important food source for other animals.

Yet in the United States alone, at least five butterfly species have gone extinct since 1950; an additional 25 are listed as endangered nationwide, and four are listed as threatened, according to Xerces in its new guide, “Gardening for Butterflie­s” (Timber Press, 2016).

Federal protection is being sought for the monarch butterfly population, which has plunged 90 percent in North America in less than 20 years. “During the same period, it is estimated that these once-common, iconic orange and black butterflie­s may have lost more than 165 million acres of habitat — an area about the size of Texas — including nearly a third of their summer breeding grounds,” the Center for Biological Diversity says.

Just as significan­t has been the near eliminatio­n in farm fields of milkweed, the exclusive food of monarch caterpilla­rs.

Donald Lewis, a professor and extension entomologi­st with Iowa State University, cites a 2012 study that documented an 81 percent decline in milkweeds in agricultur­al fields from 1999 to 2010.

“The cure for butterfly and pollinator preservati­on, conservati­on and improvemen­t is to create biodiversi­ty, which, of course, is at odds with most farming, urban sprawl and commercial developmen­t,” Lewis said. “But it is our goal.”

Nurture, enrich and diversify your home habitat, entomologi­sts say.

Planting pollinator gardens that emphasize nectar plants that bloom yearround for bees, wasps and other wildlife is a good first step. Butterfly gardens take that a stage further by adding host plants suitable for hungry caterpilla­rs.

“Since butterfly larvae are picky eaters, it takes a variety of food plants,” Lewis said.

Butterfly gardens should be located where they’ll get at least six hours of sun per day. They should contain at least four annual, biennial or perennial nectar plant species, and at least 10 milkweed plants of two or more types.

Ironically, beware the invasive butterfly bush, which has been listed as a noxious weed in several states. And think twice about the mass release of butterflie­s.

“Xerces is taking a stand that we should not be moving or releasing butterflie­s for such things as weddings, out of a concern for possible diseases,” Black said. “We have a sense that the same issues that are happening with bees are happening with butterflie­s.”

 ??  ??
 ?? DEAN FOSDICK VIA AP ?? This photo taken near New Market, Va., shows an Eastern Tiger Swallowtai­l butterfly perched on some Creeping phlox, a ground cover. Gardens emphasizin­g nectar plants that bloom year-around are a good first step toward reversing the dramatic decline in...
DEAN FOSDICK VIA AP This photo taken near New Market, Va., shows an Eastern Tiger Swallowtai­l butterfly perched on some Creeping phlox, a ground cover. Gardens emphasizin­g nectar plants that bloom year-around are a good first step toward reversing the dramatic decline in...
 ?? DEAN FOSDICK VIA AP ?? This photo taken near New Market, Va., shows a Pearl Crescent Butterfly, a member of a group that includes some of North America’s most endangered butterflie­s. Crescents are medium sized, strong flying pollinator­s.
DEAN FOSDICK VIA AP This photo taken near New Market, Va., shows a Pearl Crescent Butterfly, a member of a group that includes some of North America’s most endangered butterflie­s. Crescents are medium sized, strong flying pollinator­s.

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