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Wild Cherry Farm
Shop
Species of Concern
Bees
Specialist Bees
Threatened or Endangered Bees
Butterflies
American Lady
Baltimore Checkerspot
Black Swallowtail
Common Buckeye
Eastern Tailed-Blue
Eastern Tiger Swallowtail
Giant Swallowtail
Great Spangled Fritillary
Hummingbird Clearwing
Monarch
Mourning Cloak
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Red-Spotted Purple
Silver-Spotted Skipper
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Spring Azure
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Eastern Tiger Swallowtail
Giant Swallowtail
Great Spangled Fritillary
Hummingbird Clearwing
Monarch
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Shop Native Plants Lance-Leaf Coreopsis (Coreopsis lanceolata)
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Lance-Leaf Coreopsis (Coreopsis lanceolata)

$5.00

Lance-leaf Coreopsis, aka Sand Coreopsis, is a great plant for sunny spots that are dry, sandy or have poor soil. The nectar and pollen of the flowers attract many kinds of native bees, butterflies, skippers, and day-flying moths. It is also the host for 18 different specialist bees (Johnson and Colla, 2023). The Xerces Society considers this early bloomer highly attractive to pollinators (Xerces.org). On top of that, it is the host plant to 6 species of butterflies and moths in our area (nwf.org). What a great plant to have in the landscape.

Photo Credit: Kim Starr

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Lance-leaf Coreopsis, aka Sand Coreopsis, is a great plant for sunny spots that are dry, sandy or have poor soil. The nectar and pollen of the flowers attract many kinds of native bees, butterflies, skippers, and day-flying moths. It is also the host for 18 different specialist bees (Johnson and Colla, 2023). The Xerces Society considers this early bloomer highly attractive to pollinators (Xerces.org). On top of that, it is the host plant to 6 species of butterflies and moths in our area (nwf.org). What a great plant to have in the landscape.

Photo Credit: Kim Starr

Lance-leaf Coreopsis, aka Sand Coreopsis, is a great plant for sunny spots that are dry, sandy or have poor soil. The nectar and pollen of the flowers attract many kinds of native bees, butterflies, skippers, and day-flying moths. It is also the host for 18 different specialist bees (Johnson and Colla, 2023). The Xerces Society considers this early bloomer highly attractive to pollinators (Xerces.org). On top of that, it is the host plant to 6 species of butterflies and moths in our area (nwf.org). What a great plant to have in the landscape.

Photo Credit: Kim Starr

Life Cycle: Perennial

Sun Exposure: Full

Soil Moisture: Medium-Dry, Dry

Height: 2 feet

Plant Spacing: 10-16 inches

Bloom Time: May-August

Bloom Color: Yellow

Advantages: Bird Favorite, Pollinator Favorite, Deer Resistant, Great Landscaping plant,

Host Plant: 6 species of butterflies and moths use this as a caterpillar host plant in our area (nwf.org)

Specialist Bee: Pseudopanurgus albitarsis, P. labrosiformis, P. solidaginis, Melissodes coreopsis, M. boltoniae, M. coloradensis, M. dentiventris, M. illatus, M. subillatus, M. trinodis, Savastra petulca, Dieunomia heteropoda, Megachile xylocopoides, Ashmeadiella bucconis, and Osmia coloradensis (Johnson and Colla, 2023)

Complementary Plants: Wild Lupine, Pearly Everlasting, Purple Coneflower, Butterfly Weed, Black-eyed Susan.

Resource: Johnson, Lorraine, and Sheila Colla. A Northern Gardener’s Guide to Native Plants and Pollinators: Creating Habitat in the Northeast, Great Lakes, and Upper Midwest. Island Press, 2023

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