Herald on Sunday

Prepare to salute the admirals

Choose the right plants and you’ll be well rewarded by butterflie­s.

- Meg Liptrot

MOST GARDENERS DON’T plan to grow caterpilla­r food, but our precious plants sometimes end up exactly that. In contrast, a butterfly gardener will intentiona­lly grow food for caterpilla­rs and is thrilled to find chomps taken from the plants in their garden, taking it as proof there are butterflie­s on the way.

Butterfly host plants are not always the most attractive additions to a garden and sometimes they’re downright hostile. Take nettles, for example. They were banished from our gardens for their antisocial ways but are essential food for a couple of our prettiest native butterflie­s.

Aotearoa is not known for its flamboyant butterflie­s, unlike those from tropical parts of the planet. Many of our native butterflie­s are small and their colours more subtle. Monarch butterflie­s are the exception, but you could consider these butterflie­s internatio­nal citizens.

Red and yellow admirals have captured my heart and it is the biggest thrill to see one. Perhaps this species is called “admiral” because the butterfly looks like it is standing to attention. Admiral butterflie­s jet about at speed as if they’re on a mission.

Butterfly threats

Habitat loss is probably the most important issue affecting butterfly population­s, so having muehlenbec­kia, tussocks and a few nettles in our landscapin­g is a great way to support our native butterflie­s. Flower gardens are on the comeback to support our honeybees and they are equally important for butterflie­s.

Butterflie­s take a hit whenever wasp numbers are higher than usual and we had a long hot summer last year. Exotic paper wasps are a predator, as are German wasps. Some wasps are considered beneficial to an organic garden as they provide balance and prevent unwanted pest caterpilla­rs from destroying cabbages. Many native wasps are solitary species and are not such a threat to butterflie­s.

A butterfly-friendly garden

Butterflie­s like a sheltered, sunny garden filled with a wide range of flowers and a water source.

I once visited a tropical garden in Yandina on the Sunshine Coast, and was fascinated by a large pale blue butterfly sipping water from a puddle on a sun-lit paving slab.

When designing your butterfly garden, place a flat stone or paver in a sunny and sheltered north-facing spot, with a shallow saucer of water, or a stone with depression­s in it for water to sit in.

Some butterfly enthusiast­s recommend placing rocks in a birdbath so butterflie­s have a place to land.

Plant a mix of annuals, perennials, grasses and shrubs in your garden to provide a range of heights and staggered flowering stages to provide nectar from spring to late autumn.

At our environmen­t centre garden we planted a patch of nettles, purple-flowering scabiosa and ageratum under a small damson tree with Hebe stricta and muehlenbec­kia growing in the shrubbery behind.

A short bamboo panel protects unsuspecti­ng visitors from getting too close to the nettles.

This butterfly patch adjoins our bee garden, which is filled with flowers from spring through to autumn.

I was excited to see a yellow admiral for the first time in the garden last year. We often see monarchs as we have some swan plants, too.

Flowers that butterflie­s love

Butterfly gardens require plants with flowers a butterfly can land on easily, and florets to allow it to sip nectar with its long proboscis.

Butterfly garden favourites include: rudbeckia, hebe, buddleia, cineraria, echinacea, monarda (bee balm), ageratum, alyssum, dianthus, scabiosa, salvia, sedum, single marigolds, chrysanthe­mums, verbena, wallflower and zinnia. You can buy seeds — including butterfly plant mix, nettle, swan plant and other types of milkweed — from the Monarch Butterfly New Zealand Trust, which also offers a course on butterfly gardening.

Caterpilla­r food

An essential piece in a butterfly garden jigsaw is the planting of host plants for caterpilla­rs. Admiral butterflie­s lay their eggs only on nettle species. The yellow admiral caterpilla­r favours the exotic nettle Urtica dioica; the red admiral prefers native nettles. The Oratia Native Plant Nursery stocks these plants. Put on some gloves when planting them. Monarch caterpilla­rs prefer swan plants and other milkweeds. Ringlet and tussock butterflie­s prefer native tussock from the Chionochlo­a and Poa genus. For Copper butterflie­s plant Muehlenbec­kia species. Blue butterflie­s and their relatives rely on plants from the legume family such as clover and yellow-flowering trefoil. Find out more about native butterflie­s and their host plants: forestandb­ird.org.nz/files/file/Butterfly%20Manual.pdf or nzbutterfl­y.info

 ?? BAY OF PLENTY TIMES ?? A white hebe proves irresistib­le to a passing red admiral butterfly.
BAY OF PLENTY TIMES A white hebe proves irresistib­le to a passing red admiral butterfly.
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