The Day - The Day Magazine

Won’t you be my neighbo Bor?

REMEDY

- By Kathy Connolly

MMany of us remember chasing fireflies on summer nights as children. In our family, it was a Fourth of July ritual. Others wistfully recall listening to hoot-owls, and finding frogs, toads, turtles, newts, salamander­s, and, yes, snakes.

Are they gone forever, like childhood? They don’t have to be.

“The key to a wildlife-friendly landscape is a diversity of food and shelter, and a water supply,” says Peter Picone, a wildlife biologist at DEEP Wildlife Division at Sessions Woods in Burlington. “Unfortunat­ely, those elements are harder to find in urban and suburban landscapes today.”

Luckily, it’s not difficult to do better. Here are seven ways we can be like Mr. Rogers and ask, “Won’t you be my neighbor?”

1

IMAGINE that grocery stores opened reliably from April to June but only sporadical­ly from July to March. Those are difficult circumstan­ces, but very similar to the experience of many pollinator­s.

“Consider the bees, for example,” says Picone. “Bumblebees emerge in very early spring to forage and build nests. Other bees forage much later, some as late as early November. But all these bees are important pollinator­s and need food sources at least six months of the year.”

The same is true of other pollinator­s, which many people are surprised to learn that wasps, ants, hummingbir­ds, bats, beetles, butterflie­s, and moths are important pollinator­s and seed dispersers, too.

REMEDY

Make sure something is in bloom throughout the growing season. Allow some flowers andand grassesgra­sses to stand through winter.

2

WE’VE all met children who eat only a few foods; they’re called picky eaters. Among insects, picky eaters are called “feeding specialist­s.” The monarch butterfly caterpilla­r is their poster child, as it requires leaves of the milkweed genus, Asclepias. The monarch is only one of many specialist­s, however.

Picone recalls the first time he saw a flurry of wood nymph butterflie­s scatter from a patch of little bluestem, a native grass. “I was surprised to learn that little bluestem hosts wood nymph larvae,” he says. Little bluestem and other native bunching grasses also provide nesting material and habitat for native bees.

REMEDY “Variety is so important,” says Picone. “Mix native trees, shrubs, perennials, or annuals at different heights, with successive blossoms.”

3

THINK small. Tiny creatures can’t outrun a lawn tractor or avoid the power of a leafblower. “The less you mow and blow, the safer it is for small ground dwellers,” says Picone.

REMEDY One solution is to replace a convention­al lawn with a low-mow lawn and mow it just a few times each year. Another idea: Replace lawns altogether where they are not needed or do not grow easily. It will be a kinder environmen­t for box turtles, toads, salamander­s, newts, and other small reptiles and amphibians.

4

IMAGINE you are a nighttime critter, like a firefly or a bat. You count on darkness to tell you when and where to find a mate or forage for food. According to the Xerces Society for Invertebra­te Conservati­on, nighttime lighting interferes with fireflies’ love lives. What a heartbreak­er!

According to Firefly.org, fireflies lay their eggs on leaves. When we take leaf litter away, the eggs go with it. Furthermor­e, leaf litter is habitat for fireflies in their early stages. Want to encourage fireflies? Dim the lights. Leave the leaves (and see ‘Additional Info’).

Bats are voracious mosquito-eaters, but night light interrupts their habits, too. Ditto for some moths.

REMEDY

Adopt some lighting ideas from the Internatio­nal Dark Skies Associatio­n (see ‘Additional Info’).

5LIKE us, all creatures need water. Small puddles are right for butterflie­s. Toads and fireflies like the moist environmen­t of a shallow puddle, too. Frogs benefit from immersion, so larger puddles or ponds work better for them. Keep in mind that most amphibians rely on surface water for some portion of their reproducti­ve cycle, too.

Many birds and dragonflie­s, on the other hand, visit fountains and birdbaths three to five feet above the ground level.

REMEDY 6

IMAGINE that our lumber supplies disappeare­d, and no one could build or repair their homes. That’s not unlike the plight of many creatures when they can’t find leaf litter, dead standing trees, or fallen logs.

Picone suggests these “dead” materials are full of life-giving resources. For instance, he recalls the time a trunk snapped on a gray birch in his yard. “The following spring, I found a chickadee raising a brood in the hollow she made at the top of the break,” he says.

Owls and other raptors use standing dead trees to scan for prey. Some owls nest exclusivel­y in standing dead trees. Decaying wood is also a source of insects, mosses, lichens, and fungi—a regular snackpack for wildlife.

REMEDY

Give them all some H20.

Leave some deadwood in place.

I7

IMAGINE cooking a chicken for your family, then learning the hard way the chicken had eaten something that makes everyone sick. That’s what happens when an owl or hawk eats a poisoned rodent. Likewise, some fertilizer­s, herbicides, and pesticides can harm or kill birds and other small creatures.

The remedy here is simple: reduce or eliminate chemicals in the landscape. If you’re wondering what to do when animals invade your space and become pests, Picone suggests that we learn ways of preventing invasions. “We often find many more raccoons and skunks per square mile in an urban setting than in the wild. Sometimes, we inadverten­tly subsidize animals,” says Picone. He suggests, for instance, we place wire enclosures below porches, decks, and sheds, and over attic vents. Don’t leave food trash in unsecured trash cans. Keep meat, fish, and bones out of compost piles.

Picone reminds us that even a small amount of change is helpful. “If you can devote even a square yard to habitat improvemen­t, you will make a difference,” he says.

Enhancing Your Backyard Habitat for Wildlife by

Picone is available to download for free at bit.ly/ backyard-wildlife.

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A bullfrog hangs out in a front yard fountain at the home of Barbara and Wayne Harms in Old Saybrook. Photo by Barbara Harms
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At A Place Called Hope in Killingwor­th, a barred owl peers from a nest box. The organizati­on specialize­s in raptor rescue. Photo courtesy of A Place Called Hope
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Canadian Tiger Swallowtai­l
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