Why are Native Plants Important?
- Perhaps the most important reason to use native plants in your landscape is to provide food for wildlife. Each of us has the power to make a difference by planting native plants. Native plants are able to harvest the sun's energy to create plant material. This plant material is delicious and nutritious to insects who then convert the plant material into delicious and nutritious food (themselves) for other wildlife who depend on that insect meat (biomass) to feed themselves and their babies. Dr. Doug Tallamy's studies showed native plants produced four times more herbivore biomass than alien plants and supported 3.2 times as many species. For lepidoptera production and support, native plants supported 35 times more caterpillar biomass than alien plants.
- Native plants provide a sense of place. Most of us choose to live here and love it here. So, let's enjoy the way it is supposed to look! Forget what you knew up north, this is southwest Florida. Your yard should look like it belongs here.
- Invasive exotic (alien) plants and pests have a long history of creating costly problems after they are imported by escaping captivity. Because these exotic plants are generally "pest-free" they are sometimes able to grow wildly and become a nuisance in areas where they don't belong. Once "loose," these plants are able to smother and outcompete our native plants. Other times, hitchhiking insects make their way here on the exotic plants. Some examples of these are: melaleuca, Brazilian pepper, senna pendula, Mexican petunia, most garden center lantana, Sri Lanka weevil, rugose spiraling whitefly, and many, many more. They cost millions, even billions of dollars in damage and control.
- Generally speaking, non-native plants are not well-adapted to our lousy soil. Therefore, they require fertilizer, supplemental irrigation and herbicides to survive. Excess fertilizer runoff and leaching into waterways is believed to cause red tide and other costly issues. However, once established, native plants in the right place will survive very well without any need for these additions. Plus, a well-planned native landscape will not need pollution-belching lawn mowers!
- By increasing awareness and demand for native plants, we can all help rescue native plants from potential extinction.
Recommended Read:
"Bringing Nature Home." Dr. Doug Tallamy is a professor at the University of Delaware
"Bringing Nature Home." Dr. Doug Tallamy is a professor at the University of Delaware
Below: This is an amazing video of the Cutting Horse Eco Center garden. These are gulf fritillary and zebra longwing caterpillars devouring native maypop (Passiflora incarnata). The second video is of a zebra longwing enjoying a native firebush (Hamelia patens)
Below: This monarch butterfly flew in and landed on an endangered Curtiss' milkweed while we were monitoring the plant in accordance with our permit.
Below: A zebra longwing and Gulf Fritilary enjoying a native firebush (Hamelia patens)
DID YOU KNOW ...
Often, we will use native plants during our outreach events and classes. These plants are offered for sale at the end of the event. Why? Because native plants are not always easy to find and purchase. Therefore, we can help you get started right away providing vital food and habitat to our local wildlife.
Often, we will use native plants during our outreach events and classes. These plants are offered for sale at the end of the event. Why? Because native plants are not always easy to find and purchase. Therefore, we can help you get started right away providing vital food and habitat to our local wildlife.
Above: A juvenile gopher tortoise trucks around Koreshan State Park as the oak leaves rain down.
|