Butterfly bush (Buddleia davidii), also called summer lilac, is a deciduous shrub and as its common name implies, it attracts butterflies and hummingbirds. It is hardy in USDA zones 5 through 9 and in its cooler zones, it reaches a mature height and width of 5-feet before it dies down in winter. However, in its warmer growing range, plants can grow up to 8-feet tall and wide. Starting in the summer and continuing throughout the rest of the year, if pruned after flowering, butterfly bush produces long, 10-inch stems packed with small, fragrant blue flowers. Depending on the cultivar, ovate foliage is serrated and colored deep green, grayish-green, or lighter green and stays on the plant until late winter before dropping. It tolerates a wide range of soil and cultural conditions including drought, heat and humidity, and produces the most abundance of blooms grown in a sunny location, but tolerates partial shade. Use it in wildlife and butterfly gardens, as a specimen, mass plantings, and foundation plant.