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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
Pearl Crescent
Red-Spotted Purple
Silver-Spotted Skipper
Spicebush Swallowtail
Spring Azure
Viceroy
Wild Indigo Duskywing
Blog
Plant Search
0
0
Shop
Species of Concern
Folder: Bees
Folder: Butterflies
Blog
Plant Search
Back
Specialist Bees
Threatened or Endangered Bees
Back
American Lady
Baltimore Checkerspot
Black Swallowtail
Common Buckeye
Eastern Tailed-Blue
Eastern Tiger Swallowtail
Giant Swallowtail
Great Spangled Fritillary
Hummingbird Clearwing
Monarch
Mourning Cloak
Pearl Crescent
Red-Spotted Purple
Silver-Spotted Skipper
Spicebush Swallowtail
Spring Azure
Viceroy
Wild Indigo Duskywing
Shop Native Plants Serviceberry (Amelanchier alnifolia)
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Serviceberry (Amelanchier alnifolia)

$10.75
In Production

Serviceberry is an all-around great plant to have in the landscape. It has special value to pollinators, recognized by pollination ecologists as attracting large numbers of native bees and it is the host for 115 species of butterflies and moths in our area, including the beautiful Red-spotted Purple, Eastern Tiger Swallowtail (nwf.org) and the threatened Canadian giant moth (mnfi.anr.msu.edu/)! If that were not enough, the berries provide food and shelter for the birds. Root suckers are common, and if not removed, will result in a shrubby growth habit for the plant. The berries are also edible to humans if you can get them before the birds.

Photo credit: Matt Levin (1), John Blair (2-3)

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Serviceberry is an all-around great plant to have in the landscape. It has special value to pollinators, recognized by pollination ecologists as attracting large numbers of native bees and it is the host for 115 species of butterflies and moths in our area, including the beautiful Red-spotted Purple, Eastern Tiger Swallowtail (nwf.org) and the threatened Canadian giant moth (mnfi.anr.msu.edu/)! If that were not enough, the berries provide food and shelter for the birds. Root suckers are common, and if not removed, will result in a shrubby growth habit for the plant. The berries are also edible to humans if you can get them before the birds.

Photo credit: Matt Levin (1), John Blair (2-3)

Serviceberry is an all-around great plant to have in the landscape. It has special value to pollinators, recognized by pollination ecologists as attracting large numbers of native bees and it is the host for 115 species of butterflies and moths in our area, including the beautiful Red-spotted Purple, Eastern Tiger Swallowtail (nwf.org) and the threatened Canadian giant moth (mnfi.anr.msu.edu/)! If that were not enough, the berries provide food and shelter for the birds. Root suckers are common, and if not removed, will result in a shrubby growth habit for the plant. The berries are also edible to humans if you can get them before the birds.

Photo credit: Matt Levin (1), John Blair (2-3)

Life Cycle: Perennial

Sun Exposure: Full, Partial

Soil Moisture: Medium

Height: 4-15 feet

Plant Spacing: 6-8 feet

Bloom Time: April-June

Bloom Color: White

Advantages: Caterpillar Favorite, Pollinator Favorite, Bird Favorite, Deer Resistant

Host Plant: Red-spotted Purple, Eastern Tiger Swallowtail, Polyphemus, Cecropia, and 111 other species of butterflies and moths use this as a caterpillar host plant in our area (nwf.org)

Beneficial for Endangered or Threatened Species: Canadian giant moth (Andropolia contacta) (mnfi.anr.msu.edu/)

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