Category Archives: Butterflies

Can You Spot the Monarch in the Crowd?

News Flash!  Monarch butterflies have started their amazing migration south and they should be coming through Georgia about now. Monarchs have gotten lot of press recently and people everywhere are pitching in to help them out.

Every time we see an orange butterfly, we think (hope actually) that it’s a Monarch.  But we’re often fooled by at least three other orange butterflies that resemble the Monarch: the Viceroy, Gulf Fritillary and Queen.

To help us keep them straight, we put together this  graphic:

compare-orange-4As you can see, the Viceroy looks the most like a Monarch.  The horizontal black stripe near the bottom of the wing (circled in yellow) is the biggest clue that you are looking at a Viceroy, not a Monarch.  This mimicry is by design to enable the Viceroy to fool predators into thinking it is a Monarch which is toxic.

This graphic also appears on our page Orange Butterflies so you can bookmark it for future reference.  Keep your eyes peeled for all of these beautiful butterflies.

Tigers in the Weeds

PickerelweedIn this case the Pickerelweed which is in our pond.  Pickerelweed has beautiful blue flowers on stems that rise 3 feet above the water and it blooms most of the summer.

It attracts bees, dragonflies, wasps, hummingbirds and the beautiful Eastern Tiger Swallowtail Butterfly.  In our last post we talked about the Pipevine Swallowtail. The Eastern Tiger is another of the swallowtail butterflies that we find here in Georgia.

You’ve probably seen them in your yard.  The host plants for the caterpillars are wild cherry, magnolia, apple and tulip trees, among others