Asclepias tuberosa '' butterfly milkweed from North Creek Nurseries

Asclepias tuberosa

Common: butterfly milkweed

Asclepias tuberosa LP50 - 50 per flat

  • Height: 18"-24"
  • Spread: 24"
  • Spacing: 12"-18"
  • Hardiness Zone(s): 3-9

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Plant Details

A tough, drought-tolerant native with intense orange flowers in mid to late summer. Attracts many varieties of butterflies and is especially attractive to Monarchs. A beautiful solution for a dry sunny slope! Occurs in dry fields and roadsides in most of the US.


Characteristics & Attributes

Exposure

  • Full Sun

Soil Moisture Needs

  • Dry
  • Average

Green Infrastructure

  • Meadow/Prairie

Plug Type

  • Landscape Plug™
  • Horticultural Plug

For Animals

  • Songbird-friendly
  • Deer Resistant
  • Caution: Toxic
  • Pollinator-friendly

Attributes

  • Clay Tolerance
  • Salt Tolerance
  • Drought Tolerant
  • Native to North America

Season of Interest (Flowering)

  • Late Summer
  • Summer

Propagation Type

  • Open pollinated

Care & Maintenance

Given its natural habitat, you can see that it needs no coddling. Best located in a sunny dry spot, but will tolerate average to moist garden soil as well. Does not do well in wet soils and does not compete well with surface rooted trees. However, competes well with grass which makes butterfly weed ideal for meadow gardens. Can be propagated by root cuttings and seed. Plant is taprooted so beware when transplanting. 

Interesting Notes

Asclepias tuberosa is a showy and tough milkweed with intense orange flowers that bloom in mid to late summer. Unlike other milkweeds it does not exude a milky sap when its stem is broken. It is native to various types of prairie habitats across the Midwest and eastern United States as well as sites with poor, rocky or sandy soils - even roadsides and railroads.

Butterfly milkweed is more compact and generally less agressive than its cousin, Asclepias syriaca. It's also an excellent, long-lived performer in our bioswales (which like many stormwater systems are frequently subjected to both drought and inundation). We also love this as part of the plant palette for xeric meadows and engineered urban stormwater systems. It thrives in full sun and intense heat!

It is one of many Asclepias species, all of which are required food for monarch butterfly larvae. It is also a great nectar plant for other butterflies, insects, and even Ruby-throated Hummingbird.