Showing posts with label Uruguay. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Uruguay. Show all posts

Monday, January 7, 2019

My Montevideo Native Pollinator Garden

My Montevideo Native Pollinator Garden

For the last three years I've been studying the native butterflies of Montevideo and the plants they depend on for larval host plants and nectar plants. As I find the plants in nurseries or at friends' houses, I'm documenting the plants so others can find these plants and use them to design their own garden for butterflies, bees and the the rest of the ecosystem that these plants support. This garden plan should work well in Montevideo and Buenos Aires, and in surrounding areas of Montevideo such as Canelones and Maldonado.

While I acquired the plants at several different locations, the design was drawn and planted by Remi at Vivero Parati in Toledo Chico, Montevideo.

See my post "Montevideo Butterfly Garden Design" for a list of nurseries where I have bought native plants.

Check back here often. I'll be adding all of the native plants in my garden over the next six months.

The Plants


Dicliptera tweediana, "Canario Rojo"

Dicliptera tweediana is a small upright perennial herb native to Argentina, Brazil, Paraguay and Uruguay. Its common name is Canario Rojo. Sometimes it's called Dicliptera squarrosa. There are some really good photos of it over on the blog Flora Bonaerense. It flowers in spring and fall and gets to be up to one meter tall. The flowers attract pollinators and hummingbirds. Hummingbirds this summer are most avidly visiting the Dicliptera and the Salvia guaranitica.

Canario Rojo likes wetter locations and lots of sun. Mine is doing fine in a border bed next to the lawn that receives daily sprinkler watering and afternoon sun. Deadhead the spent flowers to extend the flowering period, and cut back in the fall. This plants roots easily from cuttings. I think it self-seeds as well. I just found some seedlings in the side yard where the potted plant was stored until I got around to planting it in the butterfly garden.

Canario Rojo is host plant to two butterflies, the Mbatara' or Batara' (Ortilia ithra) and the Princesa Roja (Anartia amathea roeselia), according to Proyecto Panambi'.
In Mariposas de Uruguay, (Bentancur, Gabriela. (2011). Mariposas del Uruguay, Argentina, Brasil y Paraguay) it is noted that both of these butterflies can also lay their eggs successfully on Ruellia species.

This plant was hard to buy in Uruguay. Most nurseries don't have it. I was able to find it at Area Indigena in Balneario Solis. Silvia now sells out of her private nursery called Yosinama in Barrio Pinares, Maldonado. She can be found on Facebook as Yosinama Gardens, where she lists her cell phone number as 098821306.

Ruellia simplex, "Ruellia"

Ruellia simplex is native to Uruguay. Its common name in English is Mexican petunia or wild petunia, although it's not a petunia at all. It's found in wet areas, so it likes a wetter area in your garden as well.  The fantastic purple flowers bloom for a day and then fall off. A new set blooms the next day. This goes on for months in spring and summer. The fuzzy stems are green to burgundy.  The true green leaves have a tiny bit of the burgundy all around the rim. It's a truly gorgeous plant. It self-seeds easily with explosive seeds, and spreads by rhizome. These qualities make the plant invasive, and Ruellia will increase the size of its clump each year. You can cut it back or divide it in autumn or winter and share it with a friend. The hearty aggressiveness of Ruellia makes is quite invasive in other countries, where the butterflies that depend on it to nourish their caterpillars are not present. 

As stated in the entry above, Ruellia and Canario Rojo are host plants for caterpillars of the Batara' and Princesa Roja butterflies. This plant is available in nurseries in Uruguay.


Passiflora caerulea, "Mburucuya"
 Passiflora caerulea is known in English as blue passionflower. This and other Passion flower species are found throughout North and South America, where the local versions of the plant are usually the main host plant of the local population of the butterfly Agraulis vanillae known in English as the Gulf Fritillary or in Spanish as Espejitos.

Female Espejitos butterflies lay their eggs on the leaves or tendrils of the Mburucuya plant. The eggs hatch several days later and the tiny caterpillars eat the leaves, molting several times as they grow. Finally, the last molt converts them to a chrysalis that looks like a dead brown leaf hanging on a branch or a nearby wall.  After a few weeks the butterfly will emerge from the chrysalis and start the cycle again.



This Uruguayan species of passionflower is locally called Mburucuya. It's a woody vine with the fringed purple and white flower that gives it its name.  The fruit is edible. I have been growing this on a bamboo trellis in my garden for two years but have only gotten a couple of flowers and no fruit yet. The bright orange Espejitos butterflies visit it frequently and its caterpillars are eating it to death. The only solution is to plant more of it for them. It's hard to find in nurseries. They will usually try to sell you a Brazilian species with much larger, thicker leaves, because it also produces larger fruit.  But the local butterflies in Montevideo truly prefer the delicate palmate leaves of this local species.

I was able to buy some prepared cuttings of this vine at the nursery called Vivero Pachamama.  It's located on Av. Giannattasio in Pinar Sur, Canelones, Uruguay. Call ahead to make sure they have it in stock.

Seeds for Mburucuya are available from Psamofila, a new native seed company in Punta del Este. Check their Facebook or Instagram to find out where to buy the seeds in Montevideo.



















Salvia uliginosa, "Bog Sage"
This 1.5 meter tall perennial sage has lovely little sky blue flowers that come and go on a spike. The delicate leaves are light green. The plant grows in a clump and spreads a little each year. It can be cut back to the ground in winter. It regrows from the roots in spring. You can get more blooms by cutting back spent spikes in summer. It grows well in full sun. The flowering season is quite long: winter, summer and fall. While I haven't found that this plant is a butterfly host plant, it is very useful to pollinators. The bees absolutely love it. In winter, little wrens have been eating the seeds from the spent flower stalks.


This plant works well in clumps because the bees like to just bumble from flower to flower without having to go too far from one to the other. It looks nice with clumps of other plants around it in different colored foliage and different heights.  In this picture the bog sage is surround by a clump of vira vira (grey leaves with white button flowers), rue (olive foliage with yellow flowers) and Ruellia (dark green leaves with deep purple flowers). See above for more information on Ruellia.

Salvia guaranitica, Black and Blue Sage or Hummingbird Sage
 This perennial herb is shorter than the bog sage, above, but its flowers are larger, the blue color is intense, and they flowers are contrasted with a black calyces.  The leaves are much larger than bog sage, a deeper green and heart-shaped.

They have an extremely long flowering season. We just passed the winter solstice and these plants still have flowers on them. They must not have any more nectar because the hummingbirds have stopped visiting them. But in the summer and fall, the hummingbirds were crazy for this plant. I only had two of them at the time, and I am certain that the hummingbirds, after checking out all of the flowers, would look at me as if to say, "Where are the rest of them? You didn't plant enough!" So I planted some more.

I bought some of these at Vivero Musacco and some by accident from someone else. They just bloomed one day on the edge of the bog sage and I was blown away by this plant.


Like the bog sage, this sage can be pruned in summer to encourage more blooms, and cut to the ground in late winter. Divide the clumps every few years if they spread too much. They are very hardy and do well in full sun and moist soil.

This is a good nectar flower for butterflies and bees.  The bumblebees can't fit inside the flower so they try to get at the nectar from the outside base of the flower where it meets the black calyx.

I read in several nursery guides that this sage has an anise scent, but I didn't notice it.  I also read that it had medicinal value as a sedative.





Salvia procurrens, Creeping Sage
This cute little sage is a ground cover with small light blue flowers very similar to the bog sage. Its round leaves spread out along runner stems and will cover a garden bed in weeks.  If it gets out of hand, and out of the bed, which it will, it's very easy to just pick up the end and pull it out or cut it back at the edge. Anything you cut or pull can be placed on the ground somewhere else and it will take root easily.

The flowers are visited by bees. Small birds forage for seeds under the leaves.




Senecio vira-vira, Vira-vira
Vira-vira is native to Brazil, Uruguay and Argentina, although it is very popular in the USA and UK, where it is known as Dusty Miller.

This perennial evergreen subshrub is in the Aster family. It's small white button flowers are very attractive to butterflies and other pollinators. Cut back the flower stalks after blooming to give the plant a nice silver mounding shape.

This plant does well in full sun and dry soil. It forms a mound about and half meter high and a meter wide. Some garden websites recommend removing the flowers because they aren't showy, but the flowers are the reason to have this plant in a pollinator garden.




Verbena bonariensis, Tall Verbena

 This local verbena is one of the tallest perennials in my pollinator garden.  It's not terribly showy, and the lavender flowers are really tiny.  It's listed on all the local pollinator lists as a must have because it's an important nectar plant for bees and butterflies.

The fact that it's tall and leggy, with slender sparse leaves, makes it a good plant for a back border, or as a sheer curtain.  This plant doesn't block other plants that are behind it. I didn't prune the verbena much this year unless it got brown and unsightly.  Tall Verbena will self seed if you leave the seeds on the plant to ripen.  I've done this so I'll probably get lots of seedlings in the spring.  Right now we are in mid winter, and I've noticed that it is starting to sprout at the upper levels of the stems. I don't want this to happen because it won't have a good shape next summer: too top heavy I think, with lots of spent woody stems.  If I prune the plant down low, it will resprout from the base instead of the tall stems.

Tall Verbena grows well in full sun and moist but not boggy soil. It will tolerate part shade as well.

If Tall Verbena is self-seeding around your garden where you don't want it, once you recognize the seedlings, it is easy to pull them out before they set seed.












Eupatorium macrocephalum, Pompom Weed

Eupatorium macrocephalum is common in fields and roadsides in Uruguay, but few people actually plant it in their gardens. It's a tall perennial that spreads by rhizome. In the winter the stalk dries up but has cute little button seeds on top. You can cut the stalks down to the ground in winter.  The plant will regenerate in spring as small rosettes emerging from the ground.  These will get nice and bushy, with fuzzy lanceolate leaves and fuzzy purplish stems.  Then suddenly they will sprout up, seemingly overnight to twice their height.  After this they will produce these lovely flowers that attract bees and butterflies for their nectar.  With their height, soft stems and large flowers, some of the stalks can tip over.  I cut them back and that stimulated some new flowers to grow.

Eupatorium macrocephalum is allelopathic, meaning it puts out chemicals that suppress the growth of other plants around it.  I haven't seen this yet, as I've only had it one year. Once you recognize the rosettes, if they get too numerous, they are very easy to pull out.

Another local native plant in the same genus is Eupatorium inulifolium. It has white flowers and a lovely perfume and attracts even more bees and butterflies that the purple variety, I've noticed.  I actually ordered E. inulifolium from my nursery, and was surprised to see it bloom purple.  A little research led me to the conclusion that I had in fact received E. macrocephalum.


Here's a photo of the leaves. This is several plants seen from above. Remember to group clumps of the same plant together.  It looks nice and it helps the birds and insects locate the plant and easily jump from flower to flower for its nectar.

These flowering plants in the aster family used to be in the same genus as Joe Pye Weed, Eupatorium maculatum. But recently, many of the 800 species in the genus Eupatorium have been moved to other genuses.  Joe Pye Weed is now called Eutrochium maculatum, and I've seen Pompom Weed listed as Campuloclinum macrocephalum. There have been a lot of changes in the scientific names of plants in the last couple of years due to advancements in genetic studies.

Baccharis trimera, Carqueja
Carqueja is one of the most recognized plants in Uruguay.  It is a small perennial subshrub in the aster family. Native to most of South America, it is often seen along roadsides and in the prairie landscape.  It has bright green leaf matter all the way down the stem to the base, and the leaf matter is separated into three wings. The stems are segmented and the flowers emerge at the segment. The small cream-colored composite flowers are fragrant and attract pollinators.
Carqueja grows readily in flower gardens and vegetable gardens. It reaches about 70 cm and will form a clump that gets larger each year. It is easily divided and transplanted to other areas.

This plant is prized in Uruguay for its medicinal value.  Uruguayans add a 2 cm length of stem in their thermos of hot water used for making yerba mate.  They will tell you that it helps with digestion and liver function. There are many studies showing that it has antioxidant, anti-inflammatory, antidiabetic, antihepatotoxic and analgesic effects.





NOTE: During 2019 I will be updating this post with photos and descriptions of the ecological value of all the native plants in my Montevideo native plant garden.
Upcoming plants will include:


Begonia cucullata
Solanum
Solidago
Aspilia montevidensis
Cestrum parquii
Asclepias
Aristolochia littoralis
Duranta
Araza'
Ipomoea alba
Ruta
Combretum
Oxalis
Yerba Mate, Ilex paraguariensis
Marcela, Achyrocline satureioides

Annual Herbs

Vines

Perennial Herbs
Malva parviflora
Nicotiana alata
Glandularia dissecta


Sub-Shrubs
Cafecillo, Senna scabriuscula

Woody Shrubs
Lantana camara
Pitanga
Rama Negra, Senna corymbosa (evergreen)
Chirca, Eupatorium buniifolium
Guayabo del Pais, Acca sellowiana (evergreen)
Jazmin del Uruguay, Guettarda uruguensis (evergreen)
Plumerillo Rosado, Calliandra parvifolia
Cedron del Monte, Aloysia gratissima

Trees
Lapacho Rosado, Tabebuia heptaphylla
Espinillo
Coronilla
Anacahuita, Schinus molle
Ceibo
Palo Borracho

Wednesday, January 10, 2018

Montevideo Butterfly Garden Design

***This Blog Post is a work in progress. I will update it continuously as I learn more. 
Voy a traducir este artículo al español.

Acknowledgment: The information in this article comes from what I have learned over the last 9 years, studying with Tree Stewards of Arlington and Alexandria and Taller en Verde in Montevideo, meeting and studying the work of Doug Tallamy of University of Delaware, and meeting and studying the work of Gabriela Bentancur in Montevideo. I've also spent countless hours scouring the internet for information on butterfly/plant interactions, and planting butterfly host and nectar plants and observing the results. 

I'm currently living in Uruguay. I'm studying Sustainable Landscape Design with Lucia Ifran. The class is called Taller en Verde, a class about designing gardens with native plants.  While a vast majority of Uruguay's land is devoted to pasture for cattle, cash crops like sorghum and agroforestry for paper pulp, a growing number of landowners are realizing the role native plants play in ecosystem and biodiversity support. The plant nurseries are slow to catch on, as usual, and so they are still carrying the usual Chinese, European, African and Australian exotics that perform so well here. As I learn of nurseries here in Uruguay that supply natives, I'll post them below.

My main goals in garden design are biodiversity support and greenhouse gas mitigation for climate stabilization. Greenhouse gases, especially carbon dioxide, are absorbed by plants. The advantage of large woody plants like trees and shrubs is that they take up more carbon dioxide and hold it in the form of wood. The longer the wood remains in the form of wood, the longer the carbon dioxide is kept out of the atmosphere. When it is chipped, burned and decomposed, it releases its carbon dioxide back into the atmosphere. When I learn about large, long-life trees that are also host and food plants for wildlife, those are the ones I most promote by planting them myself and encouraging others to plant them as well. 

Whenever I move to a new country, every three or four years, I start learning about the local native plants. Even if I don't have a garden, as was the case for four years in Rome, I learn as much as I can about the native plants, butterflies and birds so I can talk to people about the value of choosing native plants for garden design.

For the past year and a half, I've been studying the plants and butterflies of Uruguay. I have a large garden to experiment with. Currently I'm planting different kinds of passion flower to host the Gulf Fritillaries.  I can't get enough of the local small, tender-leafed local variety, because it's not for sale in the nurseries, so I've planted some of the larger leafed Brazilian passion flower next to it.  The local variety is loaded with eggs and caterpillars, but they are about to eat it all up.  I've only seen one egg on the Brazilian plant, and none of the caterpillars have moved over to it yet. Maybe they will migrate over in desperation in the near future. Update: there are now many eggs and and caterpillars on the Brazilian Maracuja' vines. 

The main purpose of this article is to share what I've learned about gardening for biodiversity and climate in Uruguay, and encourage others who have a ranch, garden, patio, balcony or even just a window box, to plant as many native plants as possible. 

When you plant natives for wildlife, don't forget that if you plant it, they will come.  And they will eat.  The appearance of caterpillars munching on your leaves is a sign that you've chosen the right plant for the right place. If they look like they're going to eat the whole plant, buy more plants.

Try to keep your garden a little messy.  Remember that the insects and birds you're supporting use the leaves, grass and shrubs as food and shelter. Don't mow the grass too often, and let the leaves remain under trees and shrubs.  If you rake and toss the leaves, you'll be throwing away the developing butterfly chrysalises you are nurturing.


Butterflies of Montevideo and their host plants

The Gulf FritillaryAgraulis vanillae

Espejitos on Lantana

Source: User:ComputerHotline/Wikimedia Commons
Locally called "Espejitos", this is one of the most common butterflies in Montevideo.  Their only caterpillar host plants are species in the Passiflora genus. Each regional version of this butterfly tends to prefer its local species of Passiflora, whether it be Mburucuya in Uruguay (Passiflora caerulea), Maracuja' in Brazil or the Maypop purple passionflower in Florida. The adult butterflies will take nectar from Lantana flowers.  Therefore, the best way to attract the Gulf Fritillary and support its life cycle, is to plant a lot of the local Passiflora vine, and several Lantana shrubs nearby. My gardener doesn't want the vine growing on the front fence, so he's constructing bamboo pyramid structures to support the vines away from the fence.
According to Mariposas de Uruguay by Gabriela Bentancur Viglione, the Passiflora is the host plant for several butterfly species in the Nymphalidae family here in Montevideo, such as the Hortensia, with brown and yellow spots, and the Juno and Julia, with similar orange coloring to the Espejitos, but with black stripes instead of spots. Erato is another butterfly in Uruguay dependent on the Passiflora. The Erato is black with two red splotches and two white stripes.
The favorite sources of nectar for Espejitos are Verbena and Lantana. 

Southern Monarch, Danaus erippus and Emperatriz, Danaus eresimus 

Southern Monarch Source: Wikipedia

Both of these are cousins of the North American Monarch, Danaus plexippus, and like the Monarch, their caterpillars feed exclusively on milkweed species, Asclepias sp. The chemicals in the milkweed are what give Monarchs their superpower of being poisonous to birds who ignore the warning of their coloration and try to eat them. In Montevideo, the local milkweed is hard to find, and not usually available for sale. The butterflies have adapted to the alien invasive milkweed from Africa, the Asclepias physocarpa or "Globitos", named for its little green balloon seed pod.  You can plant these in your garden if you find some.  They spread easily from seed once they get started. My teacher says they're terribly invasive in Uruguay and she has some trepidation in recommending them as Monarch host plant. She says if you must plant it, dispose of most of the seed pods and only keep one or two to propagate next year's crop.  But she says the best thing to do is find the local milkweeds, Asclepias mellodora, "Yerba de la Vibora" and Asclepias curassavica, "Flor de Sangre". I haven't found any yet.

Peacock, Junonia genoveva
Peacock Source: Wikipedia
The local name for the Peacock butterfly is "Pavo Real".  It is similar to the Tropical Buckeye and the Mangrove Buckeye. It thrives in uncut grass and the weeds that grow in it.  Try to leave a large area of your lawn uncut. Divide it into two patches. Alternate mowing one patch each month. That way each patch gets cut only once every two months. That gives the butterflies enough time to complete their life cycle of laying eggs, hatching, caterpillar, chrysalis and then emerging as butterfly. Some landscape management guidelines recommend only mowing once, in late fall, using a high blade and leaving the cuttings in place.

To help the Pavo Real, you can plant Ruellia brevifolia and Ruellia tuberosa. Antother plant that is mentioned is Blechum, or Green Shrimp Plant.  It seems to be also one of the Ruellias.  It's hard to find in nurseries, and seems to be a garden weed.  The preferred nectar of the adults is Verbena.

Other butterflies that use Ruellia as their host plant in Uruguay are Mbatara' (dark brown with white spots), and Princesa Roja (dark brown with red center and white spots). Princesa Roja is found in Maldonado. I'm not sure if it can be seen in Montevideo. 


Painted Lady, Vanessa braziliensis
Vanessa braziliensis by Sandro Salomon
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/legalcode

The local name for the Painted Lady is Vanesa. Its larval host plants are Marcela, Achyrocline saturoides and Malva Real, Malva parviflora. 
The adult butterfly visits Lantana for nectar.







Bataraza, Ortilia ithra
Mariposa Bataraza
by Flicker Hive Mind User Gustavo Fernando Duran
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/2.0/legalcode



The host plant of this brown spotted butterfly is Ruellia, possibly R. coerulea and R. simplex.
The nectar plant preferred by the adult butterflies is Dicliptera tweediana, or Canario Rojo, which should be available in nurseries, but I haven't found it yet. Many photos on the internet show Bataraza nectaring on Lantana.




Diablito, Pyrrhopyge charybdis
Guayabo and other Myrtaceae
Laurel, Ocotea acutifolia

Polydamas, Battus polydamas
Aristolochia triangularis "Isipo Milhombres"

Mariposa de Peñarol, Heraclides Thoas and Mancha Rubi, Heraclides anchisiades
Both of these large black butterflies, each with their yellow stripe or red spot feed on Rue, Tembetari and the citrus trees lemon, orange and mandarin.

Panambi Moroti or Bandera Argentina, Morpho epistrophus
I mention this butterfly because, even though I've never seen it in Montevideo, it's just so big and gorgeous, a light blue floating dream. I saw some by a river in Minas, Uruguay. While the adult butterflies feed on the juices of rotting fruit, the caterpillars feed on three Uruguayan trees.

Coronilla, Scutia buxifolia, is a common small scrub tree in Uruguay. It is known as the best wood for parrilla barbeque because it makes the best embers that stay hot and don't disintegrate.  People cut this tree down wherever they find it because everybody does parrilla asados all the time. I'm told though, that if you plant it, you will have this butterfly.

Other trees used by this butterfly are Inga uruguensis and Lapachillo, Lonchocarpus nitidus.


And Many More...

These are not by any means all of the butterflies that can be seen in Montevideo and surrounding areas. There are those bright yellow ones, those white ones, some swallowtails that probably eat Rue, the tiny blues in the grass that rub their wings, the dirty yellow ones with the little brown spots, the skippers and of course all of the moths. Over the course of the next year, if I identify other butterflies in my garden, and if I'm able to find out what plants they need, I will add them to this article. 

Native Plant Garden Design

Trees
Planting trees is relatively easy if you have the space.  Simply get a list of the trees that support biodiversity, figure out their size and spread, soil and water needs, and plant them in the right place. Water it weekly for the first year or two, until the roots get well established. Voila'!

The great trees of Montevideo:

Guayabo del Pais, Acca selowiana, native small fruit tree, 7 meters
Taruman melifero
Ceibo
Coronilla
Inga'
Lapachillo
Tala
Espinillo
Laurel, Ocotea acutifolia, 15 meters
Lemon
Orange
Mandarin
Tembetari', Fagara rhoifolia, spiny tree, 8 meters


Shrubs
Lantana camara, 1.5 meters high, good nectar for many butterflies
Duranta, Duranta repens, up to 4 meters, good nectar plant, purple flowers, yellow fruit
Cedron de Monte, Aloysia gratissima, 3 m, small white flowers, nectar, sun, moist, sand
Pitanga
Plumerillo
Sen or Rama Negra Senna corymbosa, evergreen shrub, 2.5 meters high
Chilca de Olor, Eupatorium inulifolium, 1-3 meters, moist areas, nectar for many butterflies
Marcela, Achyrocline saturoides, 1 meter high, flowers in March in Souhern Hemisphere
Eugenia and other Myrtaceae



Vines
Passiflora
Aristolochia triangularis "Isipo' Milhombres"




Perennial herbs
Ruellia brevifolia, "Tropical wild petunia" red flower, 0.5 - 1 meter high, part shade, dry
Ruellia tuberosa, 0.5 meters, blue flower, moist shade
Dicliptera tweediana, "Canario Rojo", 0.5 - 1 meter high, or small shrub, red tubular flowers
Ruellia blechum "Wild Hops" or "Green Shrimp Plant". Sun to part shade. 0.6 meters high
Ruellia coerulea, R. simplex, R. tweediana could all be the same local herb, 1 m high
Ruta graveolens, European herb, 0.5 meters, dry, sun
Verbena bonariensis, 1 - 1.5 meters high, purple flowers

Annual herbs
Milkweeds, Asclepias sp.
Cafecillo Senna occidentalis
Malva parvifolia, Native to Africa, Europe and Asia. 0.5 meters, sun,

Grasses
None that I've found so far

Groundcovers
Clovers

Design of the Garden

After I get more familiar with the shapes and sizes of these plants listed above, and as I learn which ones are available in plant nurseries, I'm going to design a low butterfly hedge, located all along the window of my living room.  I'll add the design to this document when I finish it.

In the meantime, I'm going to plant as many of these plants around the garden as I can, as I find them in nurseries and at my teacher's house (she shares!).  

As my teacher always says, "A plantar!". 


Native Plant Nurseries in Uruguay

Pinar Sur, Canelones
Although this nursery claims to only supply food plants, I found some nice butterfly host and nectar plants such as Mburucuya, Malva, Plumerillo, Lapachillo, and Cedron del Monte. I was not able to find the elusive Asclepias. 

Vivero El Ceibo
Carrasco, Montevideo
This lovely suburban garden center has many exotic ornamentals but also you can find some native Uruguayan butterfly hosts and nectar plants in amongst the exotics. While I was there I saw Espejitos and Erato butterflies. Available plants form this list were Verbena, Lantana, Duranta, Ruta, Ruellia, Eugenia and Plumerillo. There were several native trees, such as Anacahuita, Lapachillo, Ceibo, and Palo Borracho.

Vivero Parati
Toledo Chico, Montevideo
Many native trees, shrubs and herbaceous plants are available at this nursery. They will deliver your order after you choose your plants. The native plants I saw were Espinillo, Tembetari, Pata de Vaca, Pitanga, Ibiriapita (Arbol de Artigas), Timbo, Cina Cina, Tala, Anacahuita, Taruman, Tacoma, Ceibo, Araza, Plumerillo Rosado, Duranta, Lantana, Canelon, Verbean bonariensis, Eupatorium macrocepahlum, Rama Negra, Buddleia Amarilla, and several Ruellias. See the catalog on their website for pictures of the available native plants.

Vivero Lavender
Carrasco, Montevideo
Vivero Lavender and Tea Room is a lovely oasis just off the main street of Carrasco, Avenida Arocena, at the corner of Divina Comedia and Mones Roses. The staff is very helpful and the selection of plants is beautiful. The native plants I was able to find from my list were Verbena, Lantana, Duranta, Ruta, Ruellia and Plumerillo. The tree selection included Anacahuita, Ceibo and Palo Borracho.

Monday, May 22, 2017

Palo Borracho: Drunk on Montevideo's Spectacular Trees

What’s Blooming Now? Palo Borracho

Whether you're driving by or jogging by, you can't help but notice these tropical beauties in Montevideo's parks, blooming in March with a lacy pink canopy. Visible from a distance, their true wonder is revealed when you look up close. Its gorgeous flowers, unique fruits, and shady leaf structure make it a coveted tree in many regions of the world.

“Palo Borracho” and  “Silk Floss Tree” are common names of the Ceiba speciosa, a tree that is native to Peru, Paraguay, Brazil, Uruguay and Argentina. It is in the same family as the kapok and baobab. It can reach a height of over 12 meters.

This tree has many showy features. The bark of the younger trees is green, turning streaky brown and green later in life. The trunk and branches are covered with thick thorns. The base of the trunk flares out in a bulbous shape.

The Palo Borracho flowers in summer to fall, before dropping its leaves. The pink and white flowers resemble hibiscus flowers. The nectar attracts pollinators such as bees, butterflies and hummingbirds. The palmately compound leaves are made up of 5-7 leaflets all coming to a common point on the stem. The tree is bare in winter. In the spring, the fruits appear, looking like woody pears. These burst open, and black seeds covered in fluffy white cottony fibers fly out. This fiber has been used as stuffing for cushions, packaging, canoes, and added to paper pulp.  The seeds germinate easily and the tree grows quickly: nearly ten feet in just two years. 





All photos by Cory Giacobbe, 2017, Montevideo, Uruguay