Butterfly Gardening in India: An Introduction Dr. Raju Kasambe
Butterfly Gardening in India: An Introduction Dr. Raju Kasambe
Butterfly Gardening in India: An Introduction Dr. Raju Kasambe
In last few years there has been a tremendous increase in the interest in developing butterfly
gardens (parks) in India. Many private as well as government butterfly gardens are coming up
at various places across India. It is a good sign, in the sense we have started appreciating the
importance of butterflies as objects of aesthetic value, for conservation as well as to create
sustainable livelihood options for many. A short visit to a butterfly garden gives us enormous
pleasure. I have visited butterfly gardens in Singapore and London and in India. I was
fascinated to see so many colourful butterflies in these gardens and also to see thousands of
visitors enjoying the company of butterflies! Unfortunately, we do not have a butterfly park
as beautiful as the one in Singapore (on Jenting Island) or in Kuala Lumpur.
Butterfly garden is a garden where you can see lot of butterflies belonging to different species
at one place and in good numbers. An ideal butterfly garden is nothing but a miniature
representation of the forest in the adjoining area where various plants and flowers are grown.
The environment is made as conducive as possible for butterflies found in the area.
This article is an attempt to summarise the basics of butterfly gardening in India. These will
hopefully answer most of the questions people ask us about butterfly gardening in India.
To set up a new butterfly garden what we need is a suitable piece of land at the right location,
man power, working knowledge of landscaping, good knowledge about butterflies and their
requirements, knowledge about plants and finances to run the garden. If you want to make it a
public place, you need some advertisement or selling skills to attract people to visit the
butterfly garden.
But the Indian Wildlife Protection Act (1972) considers butterflies as wild animals and it is
illegal to keep any wild animal in an enclosure (or captivity, in the legal language). As soon
as there is an enclosure, it becomes a zoo. And to run a zoo, permission is required from
Central Zoo Authority of India and also it is mandatory to follow their guidelines for
establishing and managing a zoo. Getting permission from this authority (though creating a
butterfly park may be a good objective) is ‘mission impossible’ for a general citizen.
But permission can be taken by government zoos, if they want to set up “butterfly
enclosures” in their zoos. Zoos in India have so much of land; they should actually prove that
they can create butterfly parks in India.
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Butterfly Garden enclosure at Changi Airport in Singapore (Photo: Dr. Raju Kasambe)
Hence, for private butterfly parks or gardens (owned by individual or a corporate), the only
and best option is to set up an ‘open butterfly garden’ on your own land. Here the butterflies
are free ranging and no butterfly is captured. Luckily, we don’t need any permission to create
an open butterfly park in India. An excellent example is the ‘Ovalekar Wadi Butterfly
Garden’ at Ovala Village near Thane city in Maharashtra. This was set up by Mr. Rajendra
Ovalekar, an enthusiastic teacher and BNHS member. This garden is located on the fringe
area of Sanjay Gandhi National Park in his farm. It now attracts more than 125 species of
butterflies and hundreds of visitors on Sundays.
That means butterflies need the larval host plants on which their caterpillars will grow and
food for the adult butterflies on which they will survive.
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Butterfly Egg (Photo: Shyamal) Caterpillar (Photo: Dr. Raju Kasambe) Pupa (Photo: Dr. Raju Kasambe)
Once the land is acquired, it is important to do landscaping of the plot as per the requirements
of a butterfly garden. If it already has lot of tree, there is no need to cut the tree, but to ensure
plantation of new plants at the right locations. Landscaping should be in such way that there
are places which provide shade, lot of sunshine, and wet patches too.
The caterpillar which feeds on the LHP metamorphoses into a pupa in due course of time.
The pupa is generally well camouflaged and stays immobile till an adult butterfly emerges
out of it (there is nothing like a ‘baby butterfly’).
The more is the diversity of larval host plants in the butterfly garden the more number of
butterfly species will start breeding in the garden. And there is more chance of the butterflies
staying back in the area if they can fulfil all their requirements in the area. Hence, as a part of
developing the butterfly garden, it is a continuous process to find out more and more larval
host plants and plant or grow them in the garden. It is important to have better understanding
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among the staff (at least the gardener) of the butterfly garden to prevent uprooting of the
larval host plants, mistaking them to be useless weeds. This is important in view of the fact
that some butterfly species lay their eggs on grasses.
Many species of butterflies like the nectar of flowers. The butterflies are attracted to the
flowers due to their bright colours. Hence it is necessary to plant plots of flowering plants in
the garden. The flowering plants should be selected carefully in such a way that throughout
the year the garden has some plants flowering. Some of the common plants which attract lot
of butterfly species for nectaring are Lantana spp., Jamaican Blue Stachytarphaeta spp.,
Cockscomb Celosia spp., wild Xenia spp. and Ixora species. A small herb Tridax indica
attracts lot of blue (lycaenid) butterflies for nectaring.
Blue Mormon Papilio polymnestor on Stachytarpheta indica (Photo by Dr. Raju Kasambe)
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Every butterfly has its own choice of flowers it visits, due to the fact that the length of their
proboscis varies in different species. Butterflies with short proboscis may not be able to sip
Coxcomb bushes attract many butterflies like Pansies (Photo- Dr. Raju Kasambe)
nectar from flower with a long tubular corolla. Many large sized swallowtail butterflies are
not able to sip nectar from very small flowers as the flowers cannot bear their weight. Hence
some of the swallowtails do not land on the flower and keep fluttering while nectaring. Thus
we need to a have a variety of flowering plants in the garden to cater to the needs of the
various species of butterflies.
Also while planting the flowering trees the trees should be planted keeping in mind their
expected height to which it will grow. This will provide a vertical dimension to the garden.
Small plots of flowering plants of a particular species should be planted, this adds to the
aesthetic value of the butterfly garden, besides attracting hordes of butterflies.
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smell a conspiracy in naming butterflies, which feed on urine and fecal matter and rotten
things, as Rajahs and Nawabs!!
Butterflies are attracted to rotten and juicy flowers (Photo- Dr. Raju Kasambe)
Rotten fruits can be kept in feeding trays in the butterfly garden to attract these butterflies.
These feeding trays with rotting fruits may attract ants, which in turn will disturb the
butterflies. To manage this problem, each feeding tray should be kept in another slightly
larger tray filled with water. This will prevent ants to reach the bowl with fruits, creating a
moat-like situation like a. The feeding tray can also be kept hanging in trees at various
locations in the garden.
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Butterflies like Tigers are attracted towards Crotalaria plants (Photo- Dr. Raju Kasambe)
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Many species of butterflies gather at wet muddy patches for mud-puddling (Photo- Dr. Raju Kasambe)
Another thing is avoiding plantation of rose plants. These are useless for butterflies and need
spaying of insecticides to protect it from various moth caterpillars.
Avoid using chemical fertilizers. Instead, the garden can have a small place where natural
fertilizers can be produced using the leaf litter, cattle dung and other garbage from the
garden. This natural fertilizer should be used for the larval host plants for their healthy
growth.
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Insecticides and weedicides should not be sprayed in butterfly garden in any case
Landscaping
While setting up an open butterfly garden, it is necessary to have a plan of landscaping. But if
there are trees already in place, the plan should be designed accordingly without cutting the
existing trees. The plan should clearly describe the plots for flowering trees and take care of
the needs of various species of trees as per their requirement and dependence on sunlight.
There should be a small nursery totally enclosed to protect small saplings of various plants
collected for the garden. Few saplings of each larval host plant (at least the rare once) should
be protected here as genetic pool. Sometimes entire plants are finished by hordes of
caterpillars. This stock will help replenish the plants in the garden again.
Landscaping should involve plan of narrow footpaths in the garden which allows access to
most of the areas in the garden. These if planned well can prevent trampling of the plants by
visitors, while trying to photograph some butterfly. These may not be of concrete, but of mall
bricks to allow movement of caterpillars.
Sunshine is very important in the life of butterflies as they are cold blooded animals and need
to bask in sunlight before they start their activities in the morning. They because active after
basking in sunlight for some time. Hence the garden should have lot of flower beds with lot
of sunshine.
While planting large trees in the garden, lot of planning and futuristic thinking is needed.
When they grow, they should not create shadow in entire butterfly garden. If he garden is
very big, the trees can be planted along the eastern edge or they should be planted along the
western edge or forming a line running north-south in the middle of the garden. This will
keep big areas with lot of sunlight.
A small shade for visitors with resting facilities, a tea and snacks kiosk and basic amenities
like toilets ensure the comforts of the visitors.
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Butterfly Garden landscaping should take into consideration many factors like parking space
etc. (Photo- Dr. Raju Kasambe)
Manpower
To manage an open butterfly garden you need to hire at least one gardener, a plant expert, a
butterfly expert and a person to manage the entire set up. Off course, you can play few roles
out of these.
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major zoos for recreation. For maintaining these gardens, we can start rearing butterflies of
beautiful and colourful, not necessarily rare or those protected under Schedule-I of the Indian
Wildlife Protection Act (1972), with the help of tribal communities and create thousands of
jobs. The pupae reared from such centres can be supplied to butterfly parks around the
country. This can very well be done in villages around Western Ghats and the Himalayas by
setting up of big nurseries of local larval host plants in village lands or in private lands. What
is needed is little flexibility in the Indian Wildlife Protection Act (1972).
Readymade butterfly pupae are brought and kept in special enclosure in closed butterfly
gardens. The butterflies are released when they emerge from these pupae (Photo- Dr. Raju
Kasambe).
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