Tips for Butterfly Gardening with Native Texas Plants
Easy to Overlook Croton, Pipevines, Frog Fruit and Cudweed
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Bush Croton (Croton fruticulosus)is a
nondescript shrubby plant common in rocky woodlands and
gulches. Its flowers are insignificant, its fruits are small
and green, and in summer the leaves start to look tattered
and shredded. That means that the Goatweed Butterfly eggs
have hatched, and the shy caterpillars are hiding in the
rolled up leaves.
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The Goatweed Butterfly (Anaea andria) is
often overlooked, because the wings remain folded most of
the time giving it the appearance very much like a dead
leaf. When frightened, the butterfly flashes its wings open,
revealing the bright orange dorsal side. This flash of
orange is supposed to frighten unwanted visitors, giving the
butterfly a chance to escape.
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Most gardeners have a place that just doesn't grow
anything. It is too wet, or too dry, or too sunny, or too
shady, etc. Try Frog Fruit (Phyla incisa)in
this challenging location. Frog Fruit is not much to look
at, but it is green, stays low, and is forgiving of neglect.
It produces tiny white flowers all summer long, which are
much loved by the smaller butterflies. This is an aggressive
spreader, and can be a pest if it receives good growing
conditions. Treat it kindly for 21 days to get it
established, then give it the neglect it tolerates. If there
are wildflowers0. sprouting in your yard in the spring, you
might already have Frog Fruit too.
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The Phaon Crescent Butterfly (Phyciodes
phaon)is one of the many local residents you are not
likely to see unless you have a patch of its favorite plant,
Frog Fruit, to attract it. This is a smallish orange and
brown butterfly with black accents. If the underside of the
hindwing is chalk-colored to yellowish cream, you probably
have Phaon Crescent Butterflies in your garden. It will lay
large clusters of eggs on Frog Fruit, but only very few
survive to adulthood. The caterpillars are olive with brown
and cream-colored stripes, and branching spines.
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Some day you may spy a caterpillar that looks like an
escapee from a grade B horror movie. The Pipevine
Swallowtail (Battus philenor) caterpillar is a sure
sign that pipevine plants are in the area. One of the local
pipevines is a nondescript woodland vine called Woolly
Pipevine (Aristolochia tomentosa). I have never
seen this vine in bloom. The blooms are small, greenish
flowers that look like Sherlock Holmes' pipe. If your vine
has pretty flowers, red or black fruit, shiny leaves, or
thorns -- it is not Woolly Pipevine.
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The most common pipevine in Austin is the Swan Flower
(Aristolochia erecta) It is found in lawns and
roadsides east of Interstate 35. Swan Flower looks very much
like grass with homely caterpillars covering it. The flowers
are green and brown with pouch-like or pipe-like structures.
The caterpillars eat the flowers first, so the presence of
the caterpillar is one of the best identifying
characteristics for this plant. If you try to transplant
Swan Flower, be aware that there is a large tuber
underground which should not be damaged.
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The Pipevine Swallowtail Butterfly (Battus
philenor) is the large, black and blue butterfly with
the six large orange spots on the underside of its hindwing.
The caterpillar is black or rusty brown with waving antennae
in front, and protruding tubercles with orange dots up and
down its back. When it is feeding in warm weather the
antennae and tubercles wave around, creating quite a show.
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Cudweed (Gnaphalium purpureum) is a weed.
It will never achieve the lofty status of "wildflower". It
is found in sunny, disturbed areas that are seldom mowed. It
looks like a short, gray-white weed with cotton candy where
its flowers should be. It is a cool weather plant that tends
to disappear in the summer. This works out perfectly for the
Painted Lady Butterfly, which visits Austin only in cool
weather.
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The Painted Lady Butterfly (Vanessa cardui
) arrives in the fall, winters over in Austin, and moves
north when hot weather arrives. The underside of its wing is
a tree bark camouflage pattern with a pink-orange streak
across the forewing. The dorsal surface of the wing is an
orange background with white spots decorating black wing
tips. The caterpillars come in a variety of dark colors.
They have rows of branched spines and hide in nests of
folded leaves. Painted Lady caterpillars can also be found
on thistles and nettles.
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