Life in the Milkweed Patch

A milkweed patch thrums with life, full of moths, spiders, butterflies, amphibians and more.

August 8, 2024 | | Notes from the Wild

Monarch caterpillars are utterly dependent on milkweed, as everyone knows. No milkweed, no monarchs. However, the milkweed patch is a vibrant community, supporting not only monarchs but a diversity of other creatures.

Like monarch caterpillars, some come to eat milkweed leaves, though only a few insects can stomach a milkweed’s chemical defences. These include two beetles, two varieties of milkweed bugs, milkweed tussock moth caterpillars and orange-coloured aphids.

Broad-winged bush katydid
Broad-winged bush katydid. Photography by Don Scallen.
Roesels Katydid
Roesels katydid

Some insects, such as honeybees, arrive to feed on milkweed nectar. They are joined in this sugary quest by various flies, wasps, moths and butterflies. Other creatures simply use the milkweed’s broad leaves as convenient platforms to hang out. Katydids and grasshoppers rest on the leaves. Most are camouflaged by their milkweed-leaf colour.

Honeybee on milkweed
Honeybee drinking milkweed nectar
Catocline dart moth

Unsurprisingly, all these milkweed visitors attract predators – an array of hungry animals that include spiders, treefrogs, stinkbugs and praying mantids. Most of the insects that feed upon milkweed advertise their toxicity the same way monarch butterflies do, with brilliant orange bodies set off by black markings. This is called “aposematic” colouration – a universal warning to predators to back off.

Grey tree frog
Grey tree frog
Monarch Caterpillar
Monarch caterpillar

The yellow-black patterning of a monarch caterpillar serves the same purpose, but alas, this aposematic colouration seems only to deter vertebrate predators, such as birds.

A rogue’s gallery of invertebrate predators feast on monarch caterpillars, killing the vast majority. Spiders and stink bugs are among those unaffected by the toxins monarch caterpillars harbour.

Brilliant Jumping Spider, female
Brilliant jumping spider, female
Red Milkweed Beetles
Red milkweed beetles

A milkweed patch thrums with life, full of moths, spiders, butterflies and amphibians. I’ve mentioned only a sample of the creatures that call a milkweed patch home. There are many more.

The interaction between monarchs and milkweed is the best-known one from our perspective, but it is only one of many relationships the milkweed patch nurtures.

About the Author

Don Scallen is the author of Nature Where We Live: Activities to Engage Your Inner Scientist from Pond Dipping to Animal Tracking and Spotted Salamanders and Their World, and the monthly blog "Notes from the Wild." More by Don Scallen

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Comments

1 Comment

  1. This is a great set of photos of things that are right under our nose. Thank you for putting this in your “In the Hills” magazine. The colours of flowers and visitors are so vibrant. Just beautiful.

    Darcy Grube from Warwick, PA on Jun 9, 2025 at 7:31 pm | Reply

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