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The polka-dot wasp moths* love beggarticks.
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No Need to Beg for Beggarticks
by Ginny Stibolt
In our meadows and some of our wilder gardens, beggarticks (Bidens
alba) have run rampant with all the rain we've had here
in north Florida and the butterflies are loving it. Photos
don't begin to capture the busy buzzyness around these native plants.
This member of the daisy family, Asteraceae, is a great addition to your
butterfly garden because it takes care of itself—some
even consider it a weed. I've pulled more than a few of them
myself, but I always make sure to leave plenty in the meadows for
the butterflies and other pollinators. The ones I leave are
located away from paths so we won't end up with too many of their
stickery seeds attached to our clothes. My mother used to
call them stick-tights.
Beggarticks grow in any type of soil and will occupy most any open space
in your landscape, but they do best in the sun. Once the summer
gets hot, they grow quickly here in northern Florida and often sprawl
across and over the tops of more sedate plants. Where the
stems touch the soil, roots will form for more anchor points and
provide additional sources for moisture. You probably have
it in your landscape, but if not, find someone who does and she'll
be happy to give you some seeds or plants. You won't have
to beg. It's unlikely that you'll find any for sale since
it's so prolific all by itself. You're more likely to find
ways to get rid of it. While it's native here and cannot,
by definition, be listed as invasive, in other countries beggarticks
have become a big problem.
Butterfly Gardens
If you build a good butterfly garden, they will come. The first thing to do is to stop using
all pesticides. Then you provide nectar sources
(like beggarticks) for the adult butterflies, food for the larvae (caterpillars), shallow puddles or
mud flats, and places for shelter. When you work to attract butterflies, you’ll be supporting populations of other beneficial insects because most butterfly nectar sources also attract other pollinators.
Additional insect habitat in your neighborhood’s ecosystem also supports insect-eating birds, lizards, frogs, toads, and bats.
In turn, they help to control garden pests. Your extension agent calls this integrated pest management, or IPM. It's a balance.
Since beggarticks are the nectar source of choice for many of our butterflies
and moths, they can be an important addition to your butterfly garden. Gulf
fritillary butterflies (as shown in this photo) snub my scarlet milkweed, which I bought,
and visit the beggarticks instead. The monarchs still visit the milkweed, but I saw them on
the beggarticks, too. In about 15 minutes on a recent sunny afternoon, I
counted six different species of butterflies and several types of bees on
the beggarticks. Since this plant is so weedy, it needs to be
managed. I've cut it back with hedge clippers to keep it away from
other plants and to maintain pathways in the meadows. It fills in
nicely after it's been trimmed.
For more information on butterfly gardens see the resources section
below.
Beggarticks Are Important in Other Ways
In addition to butterfly gardens, beggarticks have been important in at
least two other ways: one was inspiration; the other for medication.
In 1941 the idea for Velcro occurred to George de Mestral, a Swiss engineer,
when he examined the beggarticks
and burdock
seeds that stuck in his dog's fur. He observed how well the little hooks on the
seeds stuck to loops of fabric and fur and thought about the
possibility of binding two materials reversibly in a similar fashion. He
developed the hook and loop fastener and submitted his idea for patent in
1951. De Mestral named his invention "Velcro" after the French
words velours, or 'velvet', and crochet, or 'hook'.
According to a recent press release, Inova will present a new drug extracted from
beggarticks that shows promising
results for some types of cancer and leukemias. See the press
release here: www.revistapesquisa.fapesp.br/?art=1707&bd=1&pg=1&lg=en
So open your mind and see beggarticks in a new light. They are
not just weeds anymore, but a valuable and ridiculously easy to grow
butterfly magnet.
* Oh Those Stylish Polka-dot Wasp Moths (Syntomeida epilais)
With their iridescent gunmetal blue
coloring punctuated by white dots and a bright red tip on their abdomens,
these insects may look dangerous, but they're not. They are day-flying moths native to south Florida and the
Caribbean Islands.
The female polka-dot wasp moth emits ultra sonic sounds to
attract a mate, not the scented pheromones like most other moths and
butterflies. When the male comes within a few feet he'll start
clicking as well.
These days, the larvae feed mostly on the poisonous oleander shrubs
(Nerium
oleander), so they are also called the oleander
moth. Because of the toxic larval food and their warning coloration,
most predators will not eat them. Before the Spanish imported
the oleanders, researchers think that the devil's potato (Echites
umbellata) used to be the main host plant for the caterpillar.
Both plants are in the dogbane family or Apocynaceae. Sometimes
the larvae are found on other members of the dogbane family, but
they mostly use oleander as their host plant and have increased
their range with the plantings of this Mediterranean shrub.
Groups of these ravenous caterpillars can strip bare an entire shrub
in a matter of a day or two. Except for California, the polka-dot
wasp moth is now found wherever there are oleanders in the Americas.
We don't have any oleanders in our yard, but looking at the large
population of wasp moths this year, our neighbors' oleanders must
have taken a beating earlier in the season.
Resources:
· For more information on wasp moths: http://creatures.ifas.ufl.edu/orn/ole_cpillar.htm
· The Florida Native Plant Society's website lists native plants by county and whether they are butterfly garden plants--either nectar or larval.
www.fnps.org
· Learn more about Integrated Pest Management at University of Florida's IPM website:
http://ipm.ifas.ufl.edu/
· My articles on Backyard Habitat and Meadow
Management have additional information on creating butterfly-friendly spaces.
· For information about Velcro: www.swissinfo.org/eng/search/detail/How_a_Swiss_invention_hooked_the_
world.html?siteSect=881&sid=7402384&cKey=1167927120000.
Ginny Stibolt would like to hear from readers who have suggestions
and questions. After all, there are more than a few transplanted
gardeners here in northeast Florida trying to figure out what works
and what doesn’t in planting zone 8/9. She's in the process of writing
a book, "Sustainable Gardening for Florida," to be published
by University Press of Florida. You may contact her or read extra
details on her articles and other information posted on her website:
www.transplantedgardener.com.
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