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The caterpillar of the giant swallowtail butterfly looks like bird droppings with its white and dark coloring. Because it resembles something unpleasant, animals will likely avoid eating it. Other caterpillars such as the spicebush swallowtail (Papilio troilus), can look like the head of a snake ...
Monarch – milkweed Painted Lady – hollyhocks and thistle Black Swallowtail – fennel, carrots, parsley Giant Swallowtail – citrus tree, prickly ash tree Pipevine Swallowtail – Dutchman’s pipevine Tiger Swallowtail – tulip poplar, wild cherry tree Spicebush Swallowtail – spicebush, sassafras tr...
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By mimicking the Pipevine Swallowtail, which eats toxic foliage of plants in the genus Aristolochia, the mimics–Red-spotted Purple, Spicebush Swallowtail, and female Eastern Black Swallowtail–find some protection, to a certain degree. Under wing, or ventral wing pattern Upper wing, or dorsal, ...
Perhaps it’s because we never had a sudden deep, deep freeze this past winter but whatever the reason, the blossoms and growth of flowering and fruiting trees, hydrangeas, roses, lilacs, milkweed, and butterfly bushes (to name a few) haven’t looked this grand in a number of years. ...
Certain butterflies utilize plant-acquired alkaloids for their own chemical defense and/or for producing male sex pheromone; a trait known as pharmacophagy. Males of the danaine butterfly, Parantica sita, have been reported to ingest pyrrolizidine alkalo
(fall) Buttonbush (wet Whitebrush Rio Grande Beebrush (south TX) Sweet Stem Lantana Lippia (south TX) Frogfruit (ground cover) Page 18 An Introduction to Butterfly Watching CATERPILLAR FOOD PLANTS These plants provide food for the caterpillars of the following butterf lies: CRIMSON PATCH: ...
I live in central PA and I have never seen a butterfly bush in the wild, and I get around a fair bit. Anyone who's ever tried to grow it from seed knows it almost never succeeds unlike butterfly weed (which is milkweed so I doubt the native-plant folks have an issue with it) ...