5 Unusual Pollinator Plants to Grow This Spring That Will Transform Your Yard's Biodiversity

Growing these plants attracts specialist bees and butterflies

Monarch butterfly with orange and black wings feeding on a purple verbena flower
(Image credit: Getty Images/Katrin Ray Shumakov)

Turning your backyard into a haven for bees, butterflies, and hummingbirds is rewarding – offer them nectar-rich blooms and they'll help establish a healthy ecosystem in return. But not all pollinators appreciate all flowers. Specialist pollinators exclusively rely on specific plants, and by adding them to your planting you can boost your yard's biodiversity.

Specialist pollinators are beneficial insects that have very specific diets. These bee and butterfly species often rely on just a single genus of plants. Meanwhile, generalist pollinators visit a wider range of plants. This makes specialists highly vulnerable to habitat loss and environmental changes, making it more important than ever to grow the plants they need.

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What Are Specialist Pollinators?

Bee pollinating blueberry flowers

(Image credit: joannatkaczuk via Getty Images)

'We have a slightly different take on the pollinator garden, as our New York homestead doesn't just get generalists like honeybees and bumblebees,' says Summer Rayne.

Generalist pollinators are those that feed on a wide range of nectar-rich plants, while specialist pollinators are species of bees, butterflies, moths, and more that exclusively rely on one type of plant, such as squash and blueberry bees.

Specialist species have co-evolved with their corresponding plants to emerge at the same time. This makes them vulnerable to environmental changes, so it's important to help them by catering to their needs and making resources readily available.

'These specialist pollinator plants aren't just a source of pollen and nectar for specialist bees and butterflies, but actually also a leaf source for insects to eat.

'In turn, this results in having more birds, because 96% of our birds rely on insects for their food,' Summer adds.

Flock Finger Lakes
Summer Rayne Oakes

Summer Rayne Oakes is co-founder of Flock Finger Lakes, an expansive homestead in the Finger Lakes region of New York. Along with two friends, she is busy transforming 90 acres of neglected land into a biodiverse haven. Summer Rayne has always had a passion for regenerative gardening and has an education in environmental science.

1. Fringed Loosestrife

Fringed loosestrife

(Image credit: skymoon13 via Getty Images)
  • Best for: oil-digger bees

'A lot of loosestrife, or Lysimachia, grows in wetlands or wet meadows,' Summer describes. 'The oil-digger bee specializes not in the nectar or the pollen, but the resin of loosestrife to line their brood chambers,' she explains.

Oil-digger bees collect the oils of Lysimachia to make their underground nests waterproof, while also feeding their larvae with a special oil mixture.

One of the top picks is the native Lysimachia ciliata (fringed loosestrife) which can grow in USDA 4-8. It's loved for its lance-shaped foliage and star-shaped yellow flowers, and thrives in a full sun position while also adapting to partial shade.

However, many Lysimachia are considered invasive plants and should be avoided, including creeping jenny and purple loosestrife, which is actually a plant that is illegal to grow in California.

2. Heuchera Americana

Heuchera 'Green Spice'

(Image credit: Gratysanna via Getty Images)
  • Best for: alumroot cellophane bee 

'We have some Heuchera americana in our pollinator garden, which is our native heuchera,' Summer Rayne says.

'Heuchera is a plant that has been cultivated for many different leaf colors and flower colors, but it's the Heuchera americana that attracts a specific kind of bee that coincides with its emergence,' she explains.

The type of bee in question is the alumroot cellophane bee which forages for pollen during the spring and early summer blooming period of this heuchera.

Heuchera americana is a beautiful variety with lobed evergreen foliage in purple, brown and bronze hues that tend to mature into green shades. Sprays of brown-green flowers spikes emerge in late spring, lasting through summer.

You can grow heuchera across USDA zones 4-9, where it performs best in full sun to partial shade, in a well-draining consistently moist soil.

'Green spice' is a pretty purple-veined cultivar of Heuchera americana available at Nature Hills.

3. Sedge

Carex Frosted Curls Carex Comans Bronze Carex testacea Carex elata aurea

(Image credit: Alamy)
  • Best for: skipper butterflies and specialist moths

'We actually opted for a sedge lawn over a conventional one because skipper butterflies and some moths use sedge grasses as their main foodstuff,' Summer Rayne describes.

While sedges are largely wind-pollinated plants and don't rely on specialist pollinators, the likes of brown skipper butterflies and certain types of specialist moths (including caterpillars of eyed brown and Appalachian brown moths) use sedge as a larval host plant.

Not only this, but sedge is also a great addition a pollinator garden to provide native insects with nesting space, shelter, and protection, especially for ground-nesting bees.

There are lots of sedges to choose from, but Appalachian sedge (Carex appalachica, which is available as a starter plant on Amazon) is a popular native pick, with its fine textured foliage.

4. Milkweed

Milkweed with pink flowers and butterfly

(Image credit: Getty Images/Annie Otzen)
  • Best for: monarch butterflies

Although adult monarch butterflies are not necessarily specialist pollinators, they are specialist when it comes to the larval stage, exclusively feeding on milkweed.

Monarch caterpillars rely on milkweed foliage. By consuming it, the monarchs become poisonous to predators, as milkweed contains toxins.

Without milkweed, monarchs wouldn't survive, and they're already an endangered species. For this reason, it's important to grow milkweed for monarch butterflies.

It can grow across USDA zones 3-10, needing 6-8 hours of direct sun for optimal flowering. Once established, these perennials are fairly drought-tolerant.

You can use find milkweed to plant in your garden at Nature Hills.

5. Gumweed

Gumweed with bee on it

(Image credit: Joey Kotfica via Getty Images)
  • Best for: oligolectic bees

'Another plant specialist insects like is gumweed, or Grindelia,' says Summer Rayne. 'It's a super interesting flower with a gummy top, as if you took a marshmallow and put it over an open fire,' she describes.

This is a powerhouse pick of specialist pollinator plants, supporting at least 75 different oligolectic (pollen-collecting) bee species. They rely on gumweed for late season pollen and nectar, as it blooms from late summer into fall.

It has daisy-like yellow blooms with sticky flower buds, which resin-collecting bees also use to build their nests.

It can grow across USDA zones 3-10 and is found as a native wildflower across North America.

What to Shop


There are so many different ways to help bees, butterflies, and birds in your yard. You can make a pollinator strip, pollinator pit stop, or create a hummingbird planter this spring.

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Tenielle Jordison
Gardens Content Editor

Tenielle is a Gardens Content Editor at Homes & Gardens. She holds a qualification in MA Magazine Journalism and has over six years of journalistic experience. Before coming to Homes & Gardens, Tenielle was in the editorial department at the Royal Horticultural Society and worked on The Garden magazine. As our in-house houseplant expert, Tenielle writes on a range of solutions to houseplant problems, as well as other 'how to' guides, inspiring garden projects, and the latest gardening news. When she isn't writing, Tenielle can be found propagating her ever-growing collection of indoor plants, helping others overcome common houseplant pests and diseases, volunteering at a local gardening club, and attending gardening workshops, like a composting masterclass.