Butterfly Foe – Garlic Mustard!

Garlic Mustard

Garlic Mustard

The mustard or cabbage family of plants includes plants we grow and eat such as broccoli, cabbage and radish. Many members of the family, though not native to the Catskills, have become so widespread and naturalized that they are a significant component of the local vegetation. Some have become weeds and one, in particular, is actually an enemy.

 

 

 

 

 

Garlic Mustard flower

Garlic Mustard flower

Garlic Mustard (Alliaria petiolata) is an invasive plant in the mustard family blooming right now throughout the Catskills. It has white flowers with four petals arranged in a cross, heart-shaped leaves with toothed edges, and when the leaf is crushed between the fingers, a garlicky odor is released, hence the name Garlic Mustard.

Garlic Mustard leaf underside

Garlic Mustard leaf underside

Garlic Mustard leaf

Garlic Mustard leaf

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Toothwort

Toothwort

Why is it a butterfly foe? It has started to dominate even clearings in the forest, which is the habitat of the native wildflower Toothwort formerly known to botanists as Dentaria, now known as Cardamine. Toothwort is outcompeted by Garlic Mustard in these forest clearings, to the detriment of the Toothwort. Toothwort happens to be the preferred food of one of our native butterflies, the West Virginia White.

 

West Virginia White

West Virginia White

So as Garlic Mustard displaces Toothwort in our forests, the butterfly loses habitat, and becomes rarer.

 

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  1. Pingback: Mustards of the Mountains! - From Root To Shoot

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