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Lyreleaf Sage Salvia lyrata Not a host plant for any butterflies in this area. A native plant. • Mid-green foliage is patterned with burgundy veins; some of the leaves have a scalloped "lyre" shape. • Pretty blue flowers on stalks rising above the foliage in mid-spring. • It self-seeds abundantly. Spiked Speedwell Veronica spicata “Sunny Border Blue” Not a host plant for any butterflies in this area. A cultivar of the native plant of southern Canada and northern U.S. • A full sun, clumping perennial with lance-shaped, crinkled, and toothed, glossy green leaves. • Speedwell bears an erect, sturdy flower spikes up to 7 inches long. • The flowers are tubular, dark violet-blue and occur from early summer to late fall. • These flowers are great as cut flowers and also will attract butterflies into the garden. Common Blue Violet Viola papilionacea Violets are host plants for the fritillary butterflies. A native plant. • Flowers occurs in mid-May. • Wild violet is a low-growing clumping perennial with a dense, fibrous root system and heart-shaped leaves. • Is often considered difficult-to-control due to its aggressive growth. • Wild violet is most often found in shaded, fertile sites and prefers moist soils. Northern Spicebush Lindera benzoin Host plant for the Spicebush Swallowtail butterfly. A native plant. • Light green, aromatic shrub having yellow flowers in April. • Yellow fall color. • Red berries in winter. Pawpaw Asimina triloba Pawpaw is the host plant for the Zebra Swallowtail butterfly. A native plant. • The flavors these fruits produce are a combination of pineapple, banana and papaya and have a soft texture and consistency. • Its dark green, oblong leaves can grow up to 12 inches long, which droop giving the pawpaw a cascading leafy appearance. • Maroon flowers grow upside down. They will bloom for about six to eight weeks usually about early March to late May. Black Highbush Blueberry Vaccinium fuscatum Blueberries are the host plants for the Brown Elfin butterfly. A native plant. • Flowers come out in early spring, before the leaves emerge. • This plant is attractive to bees, butterflies, and/or birds. • Requires consistently moist soil. Pussy Willow Salix discolor Pussy Willows and other native willows are host plants for butterflies such as the Eastern Comma, Tiger Swallowtail, Red-spoted Purple, Mourning Cloak, Viceroy, and Dreamy Duskywing. • Provides pollen for native bees. • Food source for game and song birds. • Host plant for a large variety of butterflies. • Provides cover and nest sites for a variety of birds. Common Yarrow Achillea millefolium Butterflies use for nectar. A non-native plant. A native only to California, this plant has spread throughout most of North America. • Early in the year the tender feathery leaves appear low on the ground, by the wayside, in meadows, pastures, and waste grounds. • As the year progresses the shoots appear and the soft leaves become tougher, almost prickly. • In June the first flower heads develop; grayish white to pink. Yarrow Achillea millefolium 'Coronation Gold' Butterflies use for nectar. A non-native plant. • Although the yarrow is known as a troublesome and sometimes invasive weed, horticulturists have bred many outstanding selections in a range of colors. • In general, yarrows are strong and vigorous growers that are adaptable to a variety of growing conditions. • They do well in poor soils and their longevity and flowering can actually be disturbed by the use of fertilizers. • Many cultivars are drought resistant once established. Coastal Sweetpepperbush Clethra alnifolia Also called Summersweet Used by butterflies for nectar. Not a host plant. A native plant. • Handsome foliage, compact upright habit, and fuzzy spikes of fragrant midsummer flowers. • The flowers attract butterflies and bees. • Peppercorn-like seedheads follow the flowers, providing winter interest. • The leaves turn butter-yellow in fall. Coastal Sweetpepperbush Clethra alnifolia 'Ruby Spice' Used by butterflies for nectar. Not a host plant. A cultivar of the native plant. • The cultivar ‘Ruby Spice’ bears rose-pink flowers, opening from rose-red buds. • ‘Ruby Spice’ prefers moist, well drained, acid soil and full. • Fragrant, fine-textured flowers occur in mid-Summer and attract many butterflies. Little Bluestem Schizachyrium scoparium Also called Beard Grass in some states A host plant for many of the grass skipper butterflies. A native plant. • The fine foliage and distinctive upright flowers pass through an array of color changes in the autumn after frost. • Little Bluestem retires to shades of red or purple and remains showy into winter. Switchgrass Panicum virgatum A host plant for many of the grass skipper butterflies. A native plant. • A summer perennial grass that is native to North America. • It is a natural component of the tall-grass prairie. • Because it is native, switchgrass is resistant to many pests and plant diseases. • Switchgrass is also very tolerant of poor soils, flooding and drought, Purple Lovegrass Eragrostis spectabilis A host plant for many of the grass skipper butterflies. A native plant. • This native perennial grass is 1-2' tall and tufted at the base with erect to widely spreading culms. Each culm has 3-4 alternate leaves; it is unbranched, light green to light tan, glabrous, and mostly hidden by the sheaths. • Preferred growing conditions are full sun and dry barren soil containing sand or gravel. Because of a C4 metabolism, most vegetative growth occurs during the summer when the weather is warm. This low-growing grass is resistant to drought. • The large inflorescence is attractive, forming a purple haze in the distance. Short-toothed Mountainmint Pycnanthemum muticum Now called Clustered Mountainmint by USDA Used by butterflies for nectar. Not a host plant. A native plant. • Excellent nectar and pollen source for butterflies and other pollinators. Particularly attractive to the Ailanthus Webworm moth and Buckeye butterflies. • Stem clumps make dense ground cover for wildlife. • Seed heads provide winter cover for insects. • Deer resistant. • Vigorous, easy-to-grow plant that thrives in a wide variety of condition. Talus Slope Penstemon Penstemon digitalis Also called: White Foxglove Beardtongue Not a host plant for butterflies in this area. A native plant. • Blooms April through June. • A very tough perennial. • Leaves turn scarlet in fall. False Sunflower Heliopsis helianthoides ‘Summer Sun’ Not a host plant for butterflies in this area. A hybrid or cultivar. • During June, July and part of August, 'Summer Sun' blooms at about 3' . • Loving the heat and loaded with butterflies. • Finches will nibble the seed on this tough and reliable standby. Culver's Root Veronicastrum virginicum Not a host plant for butterflies in this area. A native plant. • The most common visitors to the flowers are long-tongued and short-tongued bees. • Other kinds of insect visitors include wasps, butterflies, moths, and flies. • The blooming period usually occurs from early to mid-summer, and lasts about a month. • The flowers have no scent. Smallspike False Nettle Boehmeria cylindrica Host plant for Red Admiral, Eastern Comma, and Question Mark butterflies A native plant. • This unique plant is similar to the stinging nettles but lacks the stinging bulbs at the base of the hairs. • It has small green/white flowers that bloom spike-like through summer until October. • Although there is little nectar for the butterflies to enjoy, this plant is extremely important for the Commas, Question Marks, and Red Admirals as a host plant. Lyrate Rockcress Arabis lyrata Also called Lyre-leaved Rockcress Host plant for the Falcate Orange-tip butterfly. A native plant. • Lyre-leaved rock cress is food for larva of the falcate orange-tip butterfly. • The butterflies tend to visit the plants around the time of flowering (April-May). • At Jug Bay Wetlands Sanctuary it is primarily found growing along the Railroad Bed Trail. Carolina Wild Petunia Ruellia caroliniensis Host plant for Buckeye butterfly. A native plant. • Flowering: May - September • Habitat: Dry woods, sandy fields, rock crevices, flatwoods, hammocks. • This species can be found essentially throughout Maryland. • The plant is easy to identify because of its opposite, petiolate (having a stalk) leaves, big blue flowers, and long, thin calyx lobes. Pussytoes Antennaria species Host plant for American Lady butterfly. A native plant. • Blooms April-June • There are about a dozen species in our area, very similar in appearance and difficult to identify. • Low plants of woods, fields, and banks. Cardinal Flower Lobelia cardinalis Not a host plant for any butterflies in this area. A native plant. • Cardinalis is especially valuable for wet, boggy soils where few plants will grow. • The other advantage of this easy-to-grow perennial is its bloomtime. Late summer and early fall can be a very bleak time in the garden, with the annuals and perennials mostly passed and the fall color not yet underway. This Lobelia radiates hot color like a fire in the subdued late-season garden! Hybrid Cardinal Flower Lobelia speciosa ‘Fan Scarlet’ New York Aster Symphyotrichum novi-belgii Host plant for Pearl Crescent butterfly. A native plant. • Flowering time: August to October • Habitat: moist meadows, thickets, and shores Coastal Plain Joe Pye Weed Eupatoriadelphus dubius Also called Eastern Joe-Pye-weed Not a host plant for any butterflies in this area. A native plant. • Flowering time: July to September • Habitat: swamps, shores, wet meadows Monkey Flower Mimulus alatus A host plant for buckeye butterflies A native plant. • The flowers are irregular in shape. • They are lavender sometimes white. • Blooms first appear in mid-summer and continue into mid-fall. Pennsylvania Sedge Carex pensylvanica Possible host plant for several skippers. A native plant. • With its tough disposition and spreading habit, this native grass makes an excellent shade groundcover. • Fine texture and fountaining habit give this sedge a soft appearance. Tussock Sedge Carex stricta Also called Upright Sedge Possible host plant for several skippers. A native plant. • Plants are great nest and perching sites for birds, including ducks, small herons, swamp and song sparrows, geese, and others. • Other birds use leaves and stems to build nests and a number of birds and small mammals such as mallard, wood duck, wild turkey, cardinal, junco, squirrels feed on the seeds. Canada Wild Rye Grass Elymus canadensis Possible host plant for several skippers. A native plant. • Cool season, native bunchgrass. • Grows 4-6 feet tall. • Has wide blades and coarse seed heads similar to nodding wheat. Winged Sumac Rhus copallinum Host plant for Red-banded Hairstreak butterflies. A native plant. • Winged Sumac is a common shrub or small tree, also called Shining Sumac (from the glossy leaves) or Dwarf Sumac (from its small stature). • Easy to recognize because of the distinctive wings on the rachis (leaf stem) between the leaflets. • Used as a host plant for Red-banded Hairstreak (Calycopis cecrops). Spotted Joe Pye Weed Eupatorium maculatum (Eupatoriadelphus maculatus) Not a host plant for any butterflies in this area. A native plant. • Habitat: wet thickets, meadows • Flowering time: July to September Bushy St. Johnswort Hypericum densiflorum Not a host plant for any butterflies in this area. A native plant. • Dense Hypericum is the tallest of our St. Johnsworts growing 4 to 6 feet tall and 3 to 4 feet wide. • Yet it is very compact and densely branched, with 2 inch long very narrow, almost needle-like leaves. • It has golden yellow 1 inch flowers on and off all summer. Virginia Sweetspire Itea virginica Not a host plant for any butterflies in this area. A native plant. • Flowers appearing in late spring to early summer. • Prefers moist, rich, slightly acidic soils in partial sun to partial shade. • In its native habitat, Itea virginica is found in wetlands and swamps and along stream banks and lake edges. (Wild) Red Columbine Aquilegia canadensis Not a host plant for any butterflies in this area. A native plant. • The spurs of the petals contain nectaries and are very attractive to insects equipped with long proboscises and hummingbirds • Flowering: April - July. • Habitat: Rocky ledges, rocky slopes, low woods Red Chokeberry Photinia pyrifolia (was Aronia arbutifolia) Not a host plant for any butterflies in this area. A native plant. Located along the barn. • Flowers: March-May; white, purple-tinged • Fruit: September-December; red berry • Fall color: orange to red (Western) Pearly Everlasting Anaphalis margaritacea Host plant for American Lady. Food plant for Painted Lady butterflies. A native plant. • Pearly Everlasting is a rather weedy perennial. • The dried stalks with their pearly-white heads are attractive in floral arrangements. • In folk medicine, it is used as a salve for burns. Perennial Sage Salvia nemorosa ‘Caradonna’ Not a host plant for any butterflies in this area. A cultivar of the native plant. • This drought-tolerant perennial is noted for its vivid indigo flowers along deep purple-black stems, which gives it a bicolor appearance. Red Chokeberry Photinia pyrifolia (was Aronia arbutifolia) ‘Brilliantissima’ Not a host plant for any butterflies in this area. A cultivar of the native plant. • This deciduous shrub has it all! Fruit for the birds, nectar for insects, cover for wildlife and multi-season beauty. • Clusters of spring blooming white to pinkish flowers provide loads of nectar for pollinators. • Dense clusters of glossy red fruit follow the flowers. • The fruit ripens in late summer and persists through winter. • The glossy foliage turns brilliant red in autumn. White Meadowsweet Spiraea alba (was latifolia) Not a host plant for any butterflies in this area. A native plant. • Found in thickets, meadows and road side ditches. • A short woody shrub that's on the wild side of the garden variety family. • It has fluffy white to pink flowers in summer at the ends of its branches which attract butterflies. • Enjoys moist to rocky soils in full sun. New Jersey Tea Ceanothus americanus Host plant for Spring Azure and Summer Azure butterflies. A native plant. • The dried leaves of this nitrogen-fixing shrub make an excellent tea that was very popular during the Revolutionary War period. • A low shrub with tiny white flowers in oval clusters rising from the leaf axils on the new shoots. shrub usually found in colonies on dry, sunny slopes. Indiangrass Sorghastrum nutans A host plant for some skipper butterflies. A native plant. • Indian grass is a tall, bunching sod-former, 3-8 ft. in height, with broad bluegreen blades and a large, plume-like, soft, golden-brown seed head. • This showy perennial’s fall color is deep orange to purple. • This is a beautiful grass with a somewhat metallic golden sheen to its flowering parts. in colonies on dry, sunny slopes. Common Milkweed Asclepias syriaca A host plant for the Monarch butterfly. A native plant. • Inside the plant is a sticky white sap that contains a mild poison; its bitter taste warns away many of the animals and insects that try to eat its tender leaves. • Certain insects, including monarch butterfly larvae, are immune to the toxin. By feeding almost exclusively on milkweed leaves, they are able to accumulate enough of the poison in their bodies to make them distasteful to predators. • During World War II, the regular material used to stuff life jackets was in short supply, so milkweed floss was called for as a substitute—it is about six times more buoyant than cork! Allegheny Monkeyflower Mimulus ringens Also called Square-stemed Monkeyflower A host plant for the Common Buckeye butterfly. A native plant. • The blooming period occurs from mid- to late summer and lasts about 1–1½ months. • There is no floral scent. • Each flower is replaced by a rounded seed capsule that contains numerous tiny seeds. • The common name comes from the fancied resemblance of the flower to a monkey's face when it is squeezed by the fingers. Swamp Verbena Verbena hastata Also called Blue Vervain A native plant. • This is a slender, but erect, native perennial plant that is up to 5' tall, branching occasionally in the upper half. • The flowers are often a pretty blue or violet, but they are quite small. • It is easy to identify because it is the only vervain with elegant spikes of flowers in this color range. • The flowers attract many kinds of bees, wasps, butterflies, and moths. Sweet Fennel Foeniculum vulgare A host plant for the Black Swallowtail butterfly. A widely introduced plant. Also called Bronze Fennel • Entire plant edible; seeds in sausage and baked goods; leaves used with fish, vegetables, cheese spreads, and soups. • A tall, erect, glabrous, herbaceous perennial with glaucous, striate branching stems and a strong aroma of anise or licorice. • A native of southern Europe. • It blooms from May to September. Pennsylvania Sedge Carex pensylvanica Possible host plant for several skippers. A native plant. • A low, clumped, grass-like perennial, 6-12 inches high, with a cluster of brown seed capsules clinging high on the stem. • Foliage is pale-green in spring and summer, turning sandy-tan in fall. • Rhizomatous turf-forming with pale-green arching leaves. • Resistant to deer grazing.