ramets

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Common Milkweed Seed Pod Bursting Open and a Milkweed Beetle - Asclepias syriaca Royalty Free Stock Photo
Common Milkweed Bud With ne Milkweed Beetle - Asclepias syriaca Royalty Free Stock Photo
Common Milkweed Buds With Milkweed Beetles 2 - Asclepias syriaca Royalty Free Stock Photo
Common Milkweed Blossom Very Close Up - Asclepias syriaca Royalty Free Stock Photo
Bee Flying To a Common Milkweed Blossom - Asclepias syriaca Royalty Free Stock Photo
Milkweed seeds being dispersed by hand into the wind with blue sky - sclepias syriaca Royalty Free Stock Photo
One Common Milkweed Blossom in Sun with Leaves - Asclepias syriaca Royalty Free Stock Photo
Close up of Common Milkweed Bud - Asclepias syriaca
Rain Droplets on Common Milkweed Sprout, Asclepias syriaca Royalty Free Stock Photo
One Lovely Round Common Milkweed Blossom - Asclepias syriaca Royalty Free Stock Photo
Bee on a Common Milkweed Blossom - Asclepias syriaca Royalty Free Stock Photo
Extreme Close up of Common Milkweed Blossom - Asclepias syriaca Royalty Free Stock Photo
Common Milkweed Buds With Milkweed Beetles Close Up - Asclepias syriaca Royalty Free Stock Photo
Common Milkweed Unoped Buds Yet to Blossom - Asclepias syriaca Royalty Free Stock Photo
Many Common Milkweed Blossoms with Leaves - Asclepias syriaca Royalty Free Stock Photo
Asclepias syriaca, commonly called common milkweed, butterfly flower, silkweed, silky swallow-wort, and Virginia silkweed, is a species of flowering plant. It is in the genus Asclepias, the milkweeds. Common milkweed is a clonal perennial herb growing up to 8.5 ft tall. Its ramets grow from rhizomes. Many insect species feed on common milkweed, and it is the host plant of the Monarch butterfly. Female monarchs frequently lay their eggs on small, tender shoots, and larvae favor such shoots as food. As monarch reproduction peaks in late summer when A. syriaca leaves are usually old and tough, cut back the plants in June - August to assure that they will produce new shoots at that time. Retain some mature plants that will later distribute their seeds and whose leaves will feed rhizomes that will produce next year`s shoots.


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