Flora Fridays - July 26, 2024

(Updated: July 26, 2024, 10:57 a.m.)

Native Plants for Pollinators

Plant pollinators, crucial to the reproductive success of many flowering plants, play a fundamental role in ecosystems worldwide. Plant pollinators are animals such as bees, moths, ants, mosquitoes, flies, birds, bats, and others. Native plants are especially vital to these pollinators as they have co-evolved over generations, offering specialized nectar, pollen, and habitat that sustain their populations. By planting native species, individuals can create resilient habitats that support a diverse array of pollinators, from bees and butterflies to birds and bats, thereby enhancing biodiversity and promoting the long-term health of ecosystems.

In this article, I present three native plants that will both grow well in Montgomery County and support pollinators. Prior to any planting, it is important to analyze the site. Soil testing can answer numerous initial questions, and instructions and supplies are provided by Cooperative Extension. What characteristics does the soil have? Is the bed acidic or alkaline? How does water move through the soil? The majority of the county is rocky clay, and sandy in the southeast corner. The soil is most likely slightly acidic, similar to other southern locations. Clayey soils hold a lot of water and drain slowly, while sandy soils hold less water and drain quickly. Using this knowledge, I have selected three native pollinator species suitable for local soil types.

Viburnum acerifolium - maple leaf viburnum

Spring blooming

This native can be found in forests across the state, but also makes a great landscape plant! The maple leaf viburnum, as the name implies - has leaves similar to maple trees. However, this plant is a low growing shrub that does well in partial sun. It also has attractive blooms of small white flowers, followed in the fall by dark fruits consumed by wildlife. When planting maple leaf viburnum, give it plenty of room to spread. It tends to send up suckers from the base and the roots, which makes it a great filler plant in various garden types.

Green shrub with maple-like lobed leaves and small white flower clusters in forest understory
Summer foliage (Lisa Kimmerling CC BY-NC 4.0)
Cluster of shiny black berries on a branch with pink-red autumn leaves in woodland
Fruit and fall foliage (Katja Schulz CC BY 2.0)

Cephalanthus occidentalis - buttonbush

Summer blooming

If you have been on the shores of our region's lakes in the summer, you may have come across buttonbush. This striking shrub does best in soils that remain moist or even wet. In nature, you may find them in swamps, inlets, bogs, and other wetland areas. In your backyard, this plant is great for a rain garden or near a downspout. The blooms emerge in fireworks fashion, a sphere of flowers exploding into red-brown tipped anthers. Butterflies and hummingbirds are especially attracted to this species.

Shrub with round white pom‑pom flowers and green leaves against dark trees
Blooming buttonbush (BotBin CC BY-SA 3.0)
White spherical flower cluster with surrounding green buds and glossy leaves
Pom pom like flower cluster (Debbie Roos CC BY 2.0)

Liatris aspera

Fall blooming

Rough blazing star is a favorite of butterflies. These herbaceous perennials flower in tall spikes of showy purple flowers. The flowers bloom later in the summer and are a great source of late season bee forage. This plant does best in well drained or rocky soils. It can thrive in part sun, but also naturalize and spread in full sun meadow. This plant is a prominent part of many pollinator gardens, and one of the easiest to grow.

Two tall purple blazing star spikes in a meadow with a bee between them
Tall spikes of purple flowers (NY Botanical Garden CC BY 2.0)

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