Mariposa monarca

Mariposa monarca

Danaus plexippus
Mariposa
Icónica mariposa migratoria cuyas larvas se alimentan exclusivamente de algodoncillos (Asclepias spp.). El declive poblacional del 90% en la población migratoria del este desde la década de 1990 es una de las crisis de conservación de insectos más citadas en América del Norte; la pérdida de hábitat de algodoncillo es el factor central.
Conservación
Clasificada como En Peligro por la IUCN (2022). Lista Roja de Xerces Society: en peligro. La especie de fauna silvestre con mayor peso en el diseño de jardines de plantas nativas en América del Norte.
Plants in the catalog
Plantas hospedantes de larvas · 3
Butterfly weed
Asclepias tuberosa
Especialista
Larvae feed exclusively on milkweeds (Asclepias spp.); butterfly weed is one of the most-recommended host plants for monarch garden plantings because of its showy orange flowers and drought tolerance.
Common milkweed
Asclepias syriaca
Especialista
Larvae feed exclusively on milkweeds (Asclepias spp.); A. syriaca is one of the principal monarch host plants across eastern North America. The single most wedge-load-bearing wildlife relationship in the catalog.
Swamp milkweed
Asclepias incarnata
Especialista
Asclepias incarnata is among the canonical monarch larval host plants — same status as A. syriaca but in a wet-meadow rather than disturbed-roadside ecological context. Caterpillars sequester the cardiac glycosides from the milkweed sap as predator-deterrent defense. Planting swamp milkweed is the wet-site equivalent of the common-milkweed conservation action.
Plantas de néctar · 17
Aromatic aster
Symphyotrichum oblongifolium
Documentada
Autumn-joy stonecrop
Hylotelephium 'Herbstfreude'
Documentada
Both the Missouri Botanical Garden PlantFinder ("attractive to butterflies throughout the growing season") and NC State Extension document butterfly nectar value; the late September-October bloom overlaps the southbound monarch migration.
Boneset
Eupatorium perfoliatum
Plausible
Late-summer nectar for migrating butterflies; the Missouri Botanical Garden PlantFinder lists boneset as attracting butterflies, though it names no specific species, so the monarch association is inferred from the documented butterfly-nectar value rather than a species-level citation.
Butterfly bush
Buddleja davidii
Documentada
Monarchs nectar readily at the spikes, but the plant supports only adults — its leaves feed no monarch caterpillars, which need milkweed (Asclepias). Pair butterfly bush with milkweed if you want to raise the next generation, not just feed the current one.
Canada goldenrod
Solidago canadensis
Documentada
Common zinnia
Zinnia elegans
Documentada
Zinnias are a well-documented nectar source for butterflies; Missouri Botanical Garden PlantFinder lists Zinnia elegans as attracting butterflies, and the flat, open, late-season flower heads are a favored monarch nectar plant.
Dense blazing star
Liatris spicata
Documentada
Liatris spicata is among the most-cited monarch nectar plants in the eastern flora — the dense purple spike's late-summer bloom timing aligns precisely with the eastern monarch migration south to Mexico. Planting Liatris is the canonical complement to milkweed (host) for full-life-cycle monarch support.
Flossflower
Ageratum houstonianum
Plausible
The shallow, accessible florets of flossflower are a common late-season nectar source visited by migrating monarchs and other butterflies; this is a general nectar visit, not a host (larval) relationship — monarch caterpillars feed only on milkweeds.
New England aster
Symphyotrichum novae-angliae
Documentada
Late-season nectar fuel for migrating monarchs heading toward Mexican overwintering grounds.
New York ironweed
Vernonia noveboracensis
Documentada
Prairie ironweed
Vernonia fasciculata
Documentada
Late-summer Vernonia nectar is a well-documented fuel source for monarchs staging their southward fall migration.
Shasta daisy
Leucanthemum × superbum
Documentada
The Missouri Botanical Garden PlantFinder records Shasta daisy as attractive to butterflies; the flat, open flower heads are an accessible nectar platform for butterflies during the midsummer-to-fall bloom.
Short-toothed mountain mint
Pycnanthemum muticum
Documentada
Missouri Botanical Garden PlantFinder records the flowers as attractive to butterflies; mountain mint is a frequently observed late-summer nectar plant for migrating and breeding butterflies.
Smooth blue aster
Symphyotrichum laeve
Documentada
Spotted Joe-Pye weed
Eutrochium maculatum
Documentada
Swamp sunflower
Helianthus angustifolius
Documentada
Late-season bloom timing makes swamp sunflower a critical fall-migration monarch nectar source.
Sweet Joe-Pye weed
Eutrochium purpureum
Documentada
Joe-Pye weed is a canonical late-summer nectar source for monarchs preparing for fall migration. NC State lists "butterflies, skippers, moths, and bees" among the flower visitors; the monarch relationship is heavily documented in pollinator ecology literature.
Distribución
La población de América del Norte oriental inverna en los bosques de oyamel del centro de México y se reproduce en el este de los EE. UU. y el sur de Canadá; la población occidental inverna a lo largo de la costa de California.