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Some of you may have heard about Monarch butterflies being added to the Threatened species list in the US and be planning to immediately rush out in spring and buy all the milkweed you can manage to do your part and help the species.
And that's fantastic!! Starting a pollinator garden and/or encouraging people and businesses around you to do the same is an excellent way to help not just Monarchs but many other threatened and at-risk pollinator species!
However.
Please please PLEASE do not obtain Tropical Milkweed for this purpose!
Tropical milkweed (Asclepias curassavica)--also commonly known as bloodflower, Mexican butterflyweed, and scarlet milkweed--will likely be the first species of milkweed you find for sale at most nurseries. It'll be fairly cheap, too, and it grows and propagates so easily you'll just want to grab it! But do not do that!
Tropical milkweed can cause a host of issues that can ultimately harm the butterflies you're trying to help, such as--
Harboring a protozoan parasite called OE (which has been linked to lower migration success, reductions in body mass, lifespan, mating success, and flight ability) for long periods of time
Remaining alive for longer periods, encouraging breeding during migration time/overwintering time as well as keeping monarchs in an area until a hard freeze wherein which they die
Actually becoming toxic to monarch caterpillars when exposed to warmer temperatures associated with climate change
However--do not be discouraged!! There are over 100 species of milkweed native to the United States, and plenty of resources on which are native to your state specifically! From there, you can find the nurseries dedicated to selling native milkweeds, or buy/trade for/collect seeds to grow them yourself!!
The world of native milkweeds is vast and enchanting, and I'm sure you'll soon find a favorite species native to your area that suits your growing space! There's tons of amazing options--whether you choose the beautiful pink vanilla-smelling swamp milkweed, the sophisticated redring milkweed, the elusive purple milkweed, the alluring green antelopehorn milkweed, or the charming heartleaf milkweed, or even something I didn't list!
And there's tons of resources and lots of people willing to help you on your native milkweed journey! Like me! Feel free to shoot me an ask if you have any questions!
Just. PLEASE. Leave the tropical milkweed alone. Stay away.
TLDR: Start a pollinator garden to help the monarchs! Just don't plant tropical milkweed. There's hundreds of other milkweeds to grow instead!
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Three Morpho butterflies, and the top left I believe is a Red-Spotted Purple butterfly, scientific name Limenitis arthemis astyanax :D
Fun Fact: Red-Spotted Purple butterflies are a subspecies of White Admiral butterflies!
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Those are some authentic Monarch butterflies :)
Credit: @milo_the_toller
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This beautiful girl is a Large Tree Nymph, also known as a Paper Kite Butterfly!
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This beautiful guy is a Chinese Peacock butterfly! However, looks like the bottom left is a Morpho butterfly :D
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📌 🦋 PINNED POST
Hihi! I'm honestly surprised this url wasn't taken, but this gimmick blog is right what it says on the tin: I like to identify butterflies! (and moths too, but I'm not as good at that)
Feel free to send asks, @ me in posts, and I'll try my best to ID them! Though, I'm not a professional amd don't have any entomology background, so I can't guarantee I'll always get it right :)
All id's will be kept under the #id tag!
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