this post was submitted on 22 Jun 2026
37 points (100.0% liked)
Earth
13243 readers
40 users here now
The world’s #1 planet!
A community for the discussion of the environment, climate change, ecology, sustainability, nature, and pictures of cute wild animals.
Socialism is the only path out of the global ecological crisis.
founded 5 years ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
Peregrina means pilgrim, so I wonder if it wanders/is invasive in other areas, its name refers to something else
That's interesting to know. It's all over the place here. In brush thickets, sidewalk cracks, waters edge, etc. it's just all over the place. Monarch, Swallowtail, and honeybees just love this stuff. I have some in a terra cotta 10 gallon pot next to some planted Lantana and the bees and butterflies just can't get enough of the plant. It blooms year round and the pollinators know it. Incidentally, it is spreading, but very very slowly. It finally jumped its container after having it for a dozen years or so, so not too terribly invasive from my anecdata.
I'm glad the pollinators love it. Also yeah lantana is an invasive species of national significance where I live too, lovely flower but it just steadily takes over. They named a movie after it
That's neat to hear. There's two types here in Texas, Common Lantana, which is the white/pink/blue flowers, and Wild Lantana which is yellow/orange/red. The Wild is native here while the Common is considered invasive because it supposedly outgrows the wild one but i see them both about the same frequency. The Common also feeds the same pollinators as the Wild so who even knows.
~~Maybe it means "foreign"?~~
I got so caught up in googling "peregrine falcon" that I actually forgot what you said. Anyway - here's this...
Interesting! My Spanish isn't the best, so I didn't know that for species that Peregrina could also mean 'foreign'. The meaning of wandering/travelling makes sense/related to pilgrim