great spangled fritillary butterfly on fruitCourtesy Charlotte Meeks
Great spangled fritillary on citrus fruit

Everyone knows that butterflies love flowers. Plant the right ones, and they’ll flock to your garden. This is certainly true, but not all butterflies use flower nectar as their primary diet. Some species are more likely to drop by to visit you if you offer some fruit instead, including mourning cloaks (Nymphalis antiopa). Others, like red admirals (Vanessa atalanta) and monarchs (Danaus plexippus) enjoy both. Here’s the low-down on attracting butterflies with fruit.

Choose Juicy Fruits

butterfly fruit watermelonCourtesy Carrie Wiesen
Swallowtail butterfly on watermelon

Butterflies will use their proboscis to sip fruit juice just as they would flower nectar. Fruits like strawberries, mangoes, oranges, and watermelon are ideal.

The Riper, the Better

Attracting butterflies with fruit.Jill Staake
A monarch butterfly enjoying an overripe banana.

We don’t think of bananas as “juicy”, but as they ripen, they become softer and easier for butterflies to ingest. Rather than throwing out those rotting bananas on your counter, slice them open and offer them to the butterflies in your garden.

What birds eat oranges from fruit bird feeders?

Change Butterfly Fruit Daily

Attracting Butterflies with FruitJill Staake
Mourning cloak butterflies might visit your garden if you offer fruit.

Fruit left out overnight is likely to attract undesirable critters like raccoons, and soon becomes a smelly mess. Put fruit out in the mornings or afternoons when you’ll be around to watch. After all, what’s the point of attracting butterflies with fruit if you’re not there to see the fun?

Use Water to Repel Ants

Butterflies aren’t the only insects that will show interest in your fruit. Keep ants away by laying fruit in a shallow dish surrounded by water, which ants won’t cross. There’s no good way to keep off the wasps and bees, though, so keep kids and pets at a safe distance if you’re concerned about them.

Will butterflies visit your sugar water feeder?