Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

Why your perfectly drought-tolerant garden is a problem

Without native plants, Southern California landscapin­g harms wildlife.

- By Charles Miller revailing notions Charles Miller is the chair of the Los Angeles chapter of the Climate Reality Project and its Biodiversi­ty Committee.

Pof responsibl­e landscapin­g and gardening in California have long focused on a single metric: water use. By ignoring the importance of native plants, this formula disastrous­ly undermines biodiversi­ty.

Most of California lies within one of just five temperate biodiversi­ty hot spots on Earth and the only one in North America. We have an undeniable responsibi­lity to the valuable array of species with which we share our state. But for more than a century, we have filledourc­ommunities­withnonnat­ive plants that are not part of the natural ecosystem.

We must stop thinking of urban landscapes as purely ornamental and acknowledg­e the necessity that they serve as lifeboats for California’s natural biodiversi­ty, helping to preserve the species we have imperiled. California has experience­d startling declines in its population­s of native bees, butterflie­s, moths, songbirds and other pollinator­s in recent decades due to habitat loss.

With the additional pressures of climate change, we could lose 50% of all species by the end of the century. Our fire seasons have gone from a few months to a year-round threat in a generation, endangerin­g life that is essential to the health of our ecosystems.

No one should be so confused as to believe that exotic plants from far-flung corners of the globe can be “just as good” as native plants. In fact, there is no scientific­ally convincing argument to plant any nonnative species for ornamental landscapin­g. Bring in a tree from another part of the world, and you are planting an island of sterility that won’t help our natural, interconne­cted flora and fauna adapt to climate change.

Only native species can support existing ecosystems. Nearly all plant-eating insects rely exclusivel­y on native plant species for their life cycle. Though some pollinator­s will use the blooms of nonnative plants as a food source, native pollinator­s generally rely on native plants to host their caterpilla­rs and other forms of offspring.

Moreover, exotic plants often promote the proliferat­ion of invasive insects such as the European honeybee, which drive out native bees and other threatened species. Having already lost over 90% of our native pollinator­s, we need to take advantage of our limited urban green spaces by planting the best plants for the ecosystem: native ones.

One justificat­ion for exotic species promoted within the landscapin­g industry springs from a fundamenta­l misunderst­anding of biodiversi­ty. Many growers and landscaper­s have been incorrectl­y taught that the number of species planted is what’s essential.

In fact, while having a diverse palette of plants does help prevent the spread of disease, boosting diversity with nonnative species is counterpro­ductive.Becauseexo­tic plants don’t support local soil chemistry and microbes, native insects, birds and mammals, or any

of the other life that co-evolved with our native plants over millions of years, every nonnative plant added to a landscape effectivel­y reduces its biodiversi­ty value. At a time when we face critical species loss, we can’t afford to make such choices.

The good news is that we don’t have to. With nearly 7,000 native plants in the biodiverse zone known as the California Floristic Province, many of which have been introduced into horticultu­re, landscaper­s have a wealth of options for every purpose.

Unfortunat­ely, much of this is lost on the commercial landscapin­g industry. At a recent trade show covered by The Times, many growers promoted “California­friendly” nonnative plants as abundant and appealing options for designers.

The L.A. Department of Water and Power’s lawn removal rebate program has also embraced this marketing term.

However, no establishe­d scientific metrics exist to determine that a foreign plant is “friendly” to

California. Even if an exotic plant has water needs that are similar to those of our native plants, that doesn’tmakeitfri­endlytoour­state or part of its web of life.

The public sector is arguably even worse on this score than private industry. Less than 3% of Los Angeles’ street trees are native, and the city continues to plant nonnative trees almost exclusivel­y. Despite expert and community feedback to the contrary, most city staff members and their profession­al organizati­ons resist change.

Municipal forestry groups such as California ReLeaf and the California Urban Forests Council wrongly downplay the importance of native plants to politician­s, city employees, nursery owners, landscaper­s and those advocating native species. They fought legislatio­n that would have set very modest targets for native planting.

The California Native Plant Society, a bevy of environmen­tal organizati­ons and every scientist with a whiff of biodiversi­ty credibilit­y supported the measure, Assembly Bill 1573, but it was defeated by

those who propagate, sell and habitually plant nonnative species.

They prefer the familiar — the same handful of nonnative species that have been grown and planted in California for decades — claiming, for instance, that hardly any native tree species exist. And yet the Los Angeles Community Forest Advisory Committee recently produced a list of 87 native species appropriat­e for use as street trees in the city.

The idea that human beings know better than millions of years of evolution is the height of hubris. Next spring, when you see the lovely purple flowers on the nonnative jacaranda trees planted all over L.A., stop to notice that not a single butterfly is pollinatin­g them.

It’s time for city leaders, the landscapin­g industry and home gardeners alike to recognize that we live in a vital native ecosystem that we must support.

 ?? David McNew Getty Images ?? JACARANDA trees, a non-native species, in full bloom in South Pasadena.
David McNew Getty Images JACARANDA trees, a non-native species, in full bloom in South Pasadena.

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