Asclepias - does it sour the soil?

Discuss your green thumb (or lack thereof ;-) when it comes to propagation of milkweed and other garden plants.

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Asclepias - does it sour the soil?

Postby Jacqui_in_NZ » Fri Jun 24, 2005 5:04 am

Hello everybody

I live in New Zealand, and am hopeful that I can learn from your experiences in teh Northern Hemisphere with regards Asclepias sp.

Firstly, a bit of history. The Monarch came to NZ under its own steam (they think). Presumably blown on a storm, teh Monarch was first recorded in the mid 1800s. It wasn't until the early 1900s that Asclepias were introduced. We have two relatively common species: A. physocarpa and A. fruticosa, and there are two other species meant to be available in NZ but I haven't found a nursery stocking them as yet.

I would like to ask a question about the plant, especially where it grows naturally.

I notice that where there were once prolific stands of Asclepias, a few years later the plants have almost completely died out in that place. Of course their seed has now been spread far and wide, so there are plants nearby. But I was wondering if Asclepias actually changes the make-up of the soil - I know some other plants change a soil from acid to alkali or vice versa.

My friendsa and I are currently working on restoring what was once an overwintering site, and I have been told that Swan Plant was prolific there in the 1960s but there isn't much there now - and neither are there many butterflies overwintering in the trees there (it's midwinter here in NZ).

Hope someone can advise!

Jacqui
Writing from Romantic Russell, Amazing New Zealand
http://bitbybit.co.nz
http://monarch.org.nz
Jacqui_in_NZ
3rd Instar Member
 
Posts: 28
Joined: Sat Jul 24, 2004 12:54 am
Location: Russell, Bay of Islands, New Zealand

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