[The original article was written for the Hong Kong Gardening Society]
As gardeners we value our plants most and may be quite alert on any ‘alien’ appeared on them, so does an arborist. However, plants live with other creatures in the nature for millions of years, so for most of the time, we can just enjoy observing the amazing relationship between them rather than getting too panic.
Fruit
trees are common in gardens. Some of the
species like Citrus spp. (金橘屬; e.g. mandarin orange, lemon, pomelo) and
their relatives in Rutaceae (芸香科) are quite attractive to insects as
much as to human. Their leaves are
particularly preferred by many species of swallowtails (i.e. butterflies from family
Papilionidae 鳳蝶科), the species from which are usually quite big in size (with
attractive wing tails in most cases) – e.g. lime butterfly / Papilio
demoleus 達摩鳳蝶
(no wing tail). The
butterflies lay their eggs and entrust the life of their offspring to the trees.
The tree leaves then feed the caterpillars
and the visited plants sometimes may look unhealthy without many intact leaves –
this is when their presence is aware of. Nervous ones may worry about the health of the
affected plants and may look for way to treat the ‘pests’.
Mandarins (C. reticulata or C. erythrosa) are host plants of many swallowtails Mandarin fed by lime butterfly caterpillar
In
fact, not all species of butterflies or moths would outbreak like a pandemic (e.g.
by moth Phauda flammans 燄色榕蛾 - refer to another
article - or other sucking insects) that creates serious defoliation and may kill
trees. For swallowtails their number of
eggs laid on a particular plant are usually limited. As long as your trees are healthy with
sufficient food storage, they can resprout quickly after the feast of the
caterpillars, even though most of the leaves are eaten.
There
is no clear boundary for the term ‘pest’.
Observing butterfly life-cycle or just flying butterflies does add interest
to our gardens – for example the colourful lime butterfly likes to visit the
flowers of Lantana. Having butterflies
in a garden also increase its vitality and ecological function, when urban
development has destroyed much of their habitat. Caterpillars do feed on plants in one way, but
many of the adults also help plant pollination in another.
Picking caterpillar off the plant for observation and controlling the impacted extent of our plant |
Having some caterpillars increase gardening fun |
Lemon (C. lemon) is also recommended for attracting 'fun' to the garden |
Adult of a lime butterfly |
Applying
pesticide is always least preferred as usually it would be an over-reaction to
this normal wildlife relationship, not to say that we would harvest the fruits
from the same trees!
No comments:
Post a Comment