This is a public-interest archive. Personal data is pseudonymized and retained under
GDPR Article 89.
lespedeza butterfly
- Subject: lespedeza butterfly
- From: S* L* <s*@gmail.com>
- Date: Thu, 26 Aug 2010 21:19:11 -0500
- Dkim-signature: v=1; a=rsa-sha256; c=relaxed/relaxed; d=gmail.com; s=gamma; h=domainkey-signature:mime-version:received:received:date:message-id :subject:from:to:content-type; bh=TXg4zg7kMQEvr87W4RKTArz7kzciD43rPcmxfj96d7E=; b=PSEc0WnN9+M9xDUgq9kdAYckq8bXJ+lG/SFR/Kk30g6oBu4/+0oar1/W9LOPGHAnLn TaR4nXhTpBK0Xt1IVUw7WZcbftQfj+uObGfEr19KkX7MHGr3MIopLzBJRwpY9dI0GWx2 F2pd/btFkdh9ErX2MLfw3UlDhKSHb9vy3vtZQ=
All, I'm recently been treating sericea (Lespedeza cuneata) and have noticed
that a large number of butterflies (some species of blue) are always present
around the plants. In some cases they appear to be females ovidepositing.
Has anyone else witnessed this? Does the non-native species of Lespedeza
successfully support the butterfly larvae?
---------------------------------------------------------------------
To sign-off this list, send email to majordomo@hort.net with the
message text UNSUBSCRIBE PRAIRIE
Other Mailing lists |
Author Index |
Date Index |
Subject Index |
Thread Index