»inicia el tratamiento alternativo: a. Bálsamo de Asclepias tuberosa sobre las zonas doloridas por la viruela, para aliviar el picor que padece Kitty. b. Al notar a la paciente alterada y tras amenazar a Neville con usarle para afilar sus uñas, se le proporciona una poción»
Milkweed (Asclepias spp.), particularly A. tuberosa, are used to raise Monarch butterflies, which are endangered. Pesticide-treated plants would kill the caterpillars. Obviously, even the wholesale grower is not stupid enough to do this without pesticide certifications.
Yard prairie plants are in full bloom! Butterfly milkweed (Asclepias tuberosa) and sweet black-eyed susan (Rudbeckia subtomentosa). https://t.co/QTP3iP7JRc
They got all the news lately that the monarch butterfly is threatened This fall, you can plant monarch host plants in the milkweed family — the Latin tag will say “Asclepias”. The most common one in nurseries is Asclepias tuberosa, a nice orange one https://t.co/6ZOZU8cE73
Butterfly Weed- Asclepias tuberosa, the butterfly weed, is a species of milkweed native to Michigan. It is commonly known as butterfly weed because of the butterflies that are attracted to the plant by its color and its copious amount of nectar. It usu… https://t.co/5zMch9ycr4 https://t.co/clk25hGW9s
A female Monarch sipping nectar from butterfly weed blossoms in our pollinator garden. Asclepias tuberosa, the butterfly weed, is a North American native milkweed species. Butterflies are attracted by its color and copious nectar production, but not as a preferred host plant. https://t.co/VtIXb80NWj
Asclepias Tuberosa, butterfly milkweed. Native, beautiful orange flowers that attract monarch butterflies https://t.co/xrrTbGgP4T
Asclepias tuberosa is a species of milkweed native to eastern and southwestern North America. It is known as butterfly weed because butterflies are attracted to the plant by its color and its copious production of nectar. https://t.co/C4Vhzz3KwU
Eine Honigbiene auf der knolligen Seidenpflanze (Asclepias tuberosa) https://t.co/YtzLAOfAUE
Finally caught up (within a day) with my @iNaturalist backlog. This is a Megachile, leaf-cutter bee, on Asclepias tuberosa, orange milkweed, in my front yard on Saturday. This is my first time trying this with an animated GIF converted from video. https://t.co/9LZDkXm58f
I just uploaded “Megachile on Asclepias tuberosa” to #Vimeo: https://t.co/ptfZFdiCI3
An incredibly beautiful Zebra Swallowtail (Eurytides marcellus) on the aptly named Butterfly Weed (Asclepias tuberosa). https://t.co/22D8z9lNJx https://t.co/hlAvD88THl
A bumble bee enjoying blooming butterfly weed (Asclepias tuberosa) in my front yard. #BiophilicRVA https://t.co/Azi4IMFbWP
@drjuliashaw Butterfly Weed (asclepias tuberosa) is the host plant for the Monarch butterfly.
Asclepias Tuberosa / Butterfly Weed @longwoodgardens #asclepias #tuberosa #butterflyweed #butterflymilkweed #flowers #gardens #nature #flowerphotography #naturephotography #EdGartleyPhotos https://t.co/IJn4s1vO0q
@MudbloodHM Hice ejercicio y ahora me duelen mucho las piernas, pero ya Madame Pomfrey me ha dado bálsamo de asclepias tuberosa
@growmilkweed Arizona would like to chat. Queens (Danaus gilippus) on A. tuberosa with Monarch in foreground. Asclepias is cultivated but native Funastrum cynanchoides is quite common here and still green. https://t.co/8BROzdsnqI
@OldHeathen @CBatRun There are over 140 known species of milkweed, eleven of which are native to the state of Pennsylvania. The three most common species in our region are common milkweed (Asclepias syriaca), butterflyweed (Asclepias tuberosa), and swamp milkweed (Asclepias incarnata).
@FergusFun11 @donnadoutsk The latin names (left to right top to bottom) Asclepias tuberosa Asclepias incarnata Asclepias syriaca Asclepias purpurea (difficult to grow) Asclepias speciosa Asclepias perennis Asclepias exaltata Asclepias viridis Asclepias sullivantii Asclepias verticillata
Picked up a native milkweed (Asclepias tuberosa) at work Saturday. Already had a monarch all over it today, and fritillaries https://t.co/4KLbU7Q0t6