Viewing post #672515 by Catmint20906

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Aug 3, 2014 6:17 AM CST
Name: Catmint/Robin
PNW WA half hour south of Olym (Zone 8a)
Region: Pacific Northwest Region: Mid-Atlantic Region: Maryland Butterflies Bee Lover Native Plants and Wildflowers
Echinacea Azaleas Forum moderator Cottage Gardener Garden Ideas: Master Level Celebrating Gardening: 2015
PS--This is from their database 'home' webpage http://www.nhm.ac.uk/research-...

"1. What HOSTS contains

Records of caterpillar hostplants are scattered through published and manuscript sources worldwide and are difficult to retrieve. Many rearing records are never published and so are not accessible to other entomologists. But collected hostplant records form a valuable scientific resource that can be used eventually to answer broader biological questions about how Lepidoptera and plants interact (eg, Letourneau, Hagen & Robinson, 2001). It provides information of immediate relevance to agriculture, ecology, forestry, conservation and taxonomy.
HOSTS brings together an enormous body of information on what the world's butterfly and moth (Lepidoptera) caterpillars eat. The web-based version presented here offers a synoptic data set drawn from about 180,000 records comprising taxonomically 'cleaned' hostplant data for about 22,000 Lepidoptera species drawn from about 1600 published and manuscript sources. It is not (and cannot be) exhaustive, but it is probably the best and most comprehensive compilation of hostplant data available.
We hope that it will be useful to a wide range of biologists and that it will act as a spur to further recording and analysis of caterpillar-plant interactions."

I really enjoy the database. I have it bookmarked and have gone through it researching what butterflies & moths the plants in my own yard attract. Since I have a redbud in my front yard, I had looked it up for my own plant database which I keep on my laptop. Smiling My own records are biased though towards butterflies which are found in the area where I live--and of course towards the plants in my own yard! However, I have been going through my personal plant database and sharing information I have gathered from various sources on larval host plants, as well as the bees and beneficial insects that specific plants attract, in the hope that this information might be useful to other ATP users.

I love the ATP plant database, by the way! So easy to use with lots of good information. Smiling
"One of the pleasures of being a gardener comes from the enjoyment you get looking at other people's yards”
― Thalassa Cruso
Last edited by Catmint20906 Aug 3, 2014 7:14 AM Icon for preview

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