FIELDS OF ABUNDANCE
Lancaster County, Pennsylvania has a lot of cropland. The major crops here are hay, corn, soybeans and rye, all of which provide food and cover for several species of adaptable wildlife. Those crops are a wedding between people and wildlife, particularly for white-tailed deer that graze in all of them. Originally from Europe, red clover or alfalfa, or both species in the same fields, compose local hay fields. Several kinds of wildlife ingest parts of hay plants before that vegetation is cut and baled for livestock food in winter. Wood chucks, cottontail rabbits and deer nibble the foliage and flowers of the lush hay plants. A variety of bees, butterflies and other kinds of interesting insects sip sugary nectar from the lovely flowers, pollinating those blooms in the process, and making hay fields alive with many buzzing, or fluttering, insects. Yellow clearwing butterfly caterpillars ingest the leaves of clover ...