This has been the goal! by rhoing

This has been the goal!

Even though I am 7½ months behind in posting,* I’m so excited by this development that I have to post this now.

Playing a “long game”?
» 12/2019: Ordered Asclepias tuberosa seeds from Burpee
» 05/2020: Planted the seeds
» 09/2020: Plants “fruited”; I collected seeds
» 05/2022: Planted another section
» 06/2022: Sprouts
» 07/2022: A section of milkweed

While we were out of town recently, adult female Monarch butterflies obviously visited and laid eggs on these milkweed plants because 15–20 caterpillars are out and feeding on their host plant. This was the goal: to plant this native plant and do one person’s small part to help the depleted Danaus plexippus (Monarch butterfly) species.

» ID’ed as Danaus plexippus or “Monarch” at [ BAMONA ] [ BugGuide ]
» Species pages: [ BAMONA ] [ BugGuide ] [ UK Butterflies** ]

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* March, April, most of May and half of December 2022 and then all of this year to this date
** From UK Butterflies: “This species is the largest butterfly seen in the British Isles, and is also one of our rarest migrants. This butterfly is known for its ability to migrate across large distances. The migrations in north America are one of the greatest natural phenomena in the world - where the adult butterflies can migrate from as far north as Canada to the overwintering grounds in very specific sites in Mexico, the west coast of California and Florida. The first record of this species in the British Isles, by a schoolboy, was on 6th September 1876 in Neath in south Wales. Although initial records were thought to be the result of accidental transportation by ship, subsequent years, such as 1933 when 40 individuals were caught, meant that this theory was dismissed and that the most-likely cause was a genuine immigration.

The total number of records for the British Isles is less than 500. The most-recent major migration was in 1981 with 135 sightings. Many north American bird species were also recorded that year. However, there is still some question as to the true origin of this immigration since the species is also known from Madeira, southern Spain, Portugal and the Canary Islands, which it reached in 1860 and survives using Asclepias curassavica as its foodplant.

The larva feeds on various Milkweeds (Asclepias species) which are not native to the British Isles, and this explains why the immature stages have not been found in the British Isles.

[ PXL_20230506_181057505S100x75tm :: cell phone ]

Looking back
  1 year ago: “Crêpes Suzette”
 2 years ago: “Today, just a rose”
 3 years ago: “First ‘Pandemic Puzzle’ completed”
 4 years ago: “Learned another repair…”
 5 years ago: No post
 6 years ago: “Ladybug on Dandelion”
 7 years ago: “Five chairs on a windy day”
 8 years ago: “Macaela”
 9 years ago: “Mayapple (May apple)”
10 years ago: “Brazilian plume [flower]”
11 years ago: “Pastels in a small space”
12 years ago: “Nature’s packaging”
Awesome sauce!
May 8th, 2023  
Going to be interesting to follow!
May 8th, 2023  
Great image! I planted one last week purchased at a Master Gardener sale.
May 8th, 2023  
Well spotted!
May 9th, 2023  
What an elegant creature
May 9th, 2023  
Well done! What a blessing to see the fruits of your efforts.
May 10th, 2023  
@maggiemae Alas, just for a couple days: birds and wasps got them all.
May 10th, 2023  
@genealogygenie Benefit from the lesson I have learned this week: if they're not protected somehow, the birds and wasps will get them. I have no caterpillars left and no chrysalises.
May 10th, 2023  
Wonderful pic and well done!
May 20th, 2023  
So glad you caught him when you did! It's a terrific close-up
May 20th, 2023  
Pretty close up
June 6th, 2023  
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