Keep South Carolina Wild

WAIT Partner Update: Proterra

Proterra, a leading manufacturer of advanced battery technology, is our newest WAIT partner! Located in Greer, SC, Proterra is helping power the shift to a sustainable future by providing innovative battery solutions for heavy-duty commercial vehicles and equipment manufactures.

During a recent visit, Jay Keck, SCWF’s Industry Habitat Manager, explored the property with staff and led a nature walk for approximately 25 enthusiastic employees eager to learn about habitat creation and conservation. Along with installed nest boxes for the Eastern bluebird and wood duck, Eastern screech owl boxes will be installed at the edge of a forested area, increasing the likelihood of this beautiful but declining bird to breed in the area. Prairie areas border much of the property and provide food for many pollinators and the animals that feed upon them. Plants like goldenrod, blackberry, and pokeweed, are numerous and provide food for dozens of bird species and possibly hundreds of types of moths and butterflies. Larger plants like sassafras, black cherry, white oak and willow oak, provide the property with an excellent source of food for caterpillars, birds, reptiles, and mammals.

The WAIT team at Proterra has created a fun and easy way for employees to record the plant and animal species on the property by providing a QR code for employees to scan which directs them to a common page where they can input their findings. This inventory of plants and animals, and its access to employees, has the potential to open up their eyes to the biodiversity on the property, which can lead to conservation efforts on and off the property. To assist employees with the inventories, field guides of local plants and animals are available for employees in the lunchroom. In addition to these guides, nature books, interpretive nature signs, and information about the WAIT program and Proterra’s commitment to habitat conservation is available for employees to explore.

We applaud these initial efforts by Proterra and cannot wait to see what they do for wildlife and wildlife conservation in future years. The name Proterra means “For the Earth” and we love to see their employees living this out daily. Well done, Proterra!

The 2026 Milkweed for Monarchs Program: More Than 10 Years of Monarch Conservation in South Carolina

We are thrilled to announce the successful mailing of 5,000 packets of native milkweed seeds to residents across South Carolina, marking the eleventh year of the Milkweed for Monarch’s Program! This program allows residents of our state to sign up to receive packets of free native milkweed seeds (Common, Swamp, & Butterfly Milkweed).

Because monarchs only lay eggs on milkweed plants, they must have native milkweed along their 3,000-mile journey to survive. Over the past twenty years, there has been a sharp decline in the monarch butterfly population along their normal migration routes from Canada to Mexico. During this time, these important pollinators have dwindled by almost 97 percent. Native milkweed plants, however, are the key to helping these iconic pollinators thrive.

This program helps SCWF make a statewide impact for monarchs, and we are so grateful to every single person who signs up to receive a seed packet. We recently received some photos from our milkweed seed recipients, and that is one of our favorite parts of this project! If you have any photos of monarchs that you would like to share with us, you can email us at mail@scwf.org.

We hosted 20 volunteer days dedicated to hand-mixing and packaging milkweed seeds this year! We are incredibly grateful to the many volunteers who generously donated their time to support this important effort. Thanks to their hard work, SCWF can continue providing milkweed seeds that help create habitat for monarch butterflies and other pollinators across South Carolina.

Thank you to Comporium for sponsoring the 2026 Milkweed for Monarchs Project!

Columbia’s Downtown Pollinator Garden

Published in the Columbia Star on May 28, 2026 – https://www.thecolumbiastar.com/articles/columbias-downtown-pollinator-garden/

Volunteers with the South Carolina Wildlife Federation (SCWF) planted a native plant pollinator garden in their wildlife habitat in front of their downtown office at 1519 Richland Street. As spring transitions to summer, the plants are flowering and fruiting. In a relatively small space there are over 20 species attracting bees, butterflies, and hummingbirds. The garden also features the four basic wildlife habitat elements: food, water, cover, and places to raise young.

Three natives planted for monarch larvae are swamp milkweed, Asclepias incarnata; common milkweed, A. syriaca; and butterfly weed, A. tuberosa.

Passionvine, Passiflora incarnata, is deliberately planted in containers to keep it from spreading across the landscape via its underground rhizomatous roots and taking over the garden. The vine hosts the eggs and larvae of gulf fritillary and variegated fritillary butterflies.

A striking blue flowering perennial plant is false indigo, Baptisia australis. Native Americans and early colonists used the flower to produce a blue dye before the Asian indigo, aka true indigo, Indigofera tinctoria, was introduced to America.

False indigo is a host plant to many butterflies such as orange sulphur, clouded sulphur, frosted elfin, eastern tailed blue, hoary edge, and wild indigo duskywing.

Common yarrow, Achillea millefolium, is a flower attracting an incredible number of pollinators because of the design of the flower face. The nectar that bees and butterflies need is easy to access on the broad flat flower face making for perfect landing and feeding platforms. Insects can stay still and sip from the many tiny florets. American lady, checkerspots, fritillaries, hairstreaks, skippers, and sulphurs visit yarrow for nectar.

Common St. John’s Wort, Hypericum perforatum, is a host plant to the larvae of the gray hairstreak butterfly. Female azure butterflies lay their eggs on the flower buds and the caterpillars eat the flower parts and developing fruits. The plant also hosts moths like the wavylined emerald, scallop moth, and gray half-spot moth.

Coreopsis ‘Moonbeam,’ Coreopsis verticillata, will start blooming from mid-summer all the way until the first hard frost. Something to consider when planting a pollinator garden is to select a palette of plants for spring, summer, and autumn bloom.

Two varieties of blueberries grow in the pollinator garden: Vacinnium darrowii ‘Rosa’s Blush’ and Vacinnium x Perpetua. Planting blueberries in the garden creates a mutually beneficial relationship between the plants and pollinators. Blueberry flowers provide spring nectar for native bees and the bees perform “buzz pollination” to ensure a large, healthy harvest.

Visit the SCWF downtown pollinator garden to view the entire garden and take home ideas for your landscape.

Published in the Columbia Star on May 28, 2026 – https://www.thecolumbiastar.com/articles/columbias-downtown-pollinator-garden/