Los Angeles Times

Your yard can boost wildlife

- Lisa Novick La Cañada Flintridge The writer is director of outreach for the Theodore Payne Foundation for Wild Flowers and Native Plants.

Re “The wildlife in our midst,” editorial, Jan. 16

Urban wildlife population­s are maintained not only by open space and wildlife corridors, but also by native plant habitat in our yards.

Native landscapin­g is one of the “less dramatic and less costly ways to help animals survive.” If more Angelenos added native sage, buckwheat, lilac, oak and other species to their yards, we could make habitat citywide. Native plants are essential because they’re the foundation of the food web due to co-evolutiona­ry relationsh­ips with wildlife.

Right now, a limiting factor in creating habitat is lack of widespread availabili­ty of native plants. (Convention­al nurseries profit from the soil amendments, fertilizer­s and pesticides needed by nonnatives.) Investing a few million dollars would go a long way toward establishi­ng more native nurseries across Los Angeles, and the benefit to wildlife and people would be immense: decreased water use, increased health of our watershed, and support of Southern California’s beautiful and amazing biodiversi­ty.

Thank you for highlighti­ng the need for developers and Los Angeles officials to preserve the natural open space that’s so important to community well-being and the very existence of wild animals living alongside us.

That concept should apply across our region, yet just last month, the city of Temecula greenlight­ed the Altair developmen­t, which will severely constrain a wildlife corridor critical to the survival of the Santa Ana mountain lions. These lions already suffer the lowest genetic diversity of any California population, and scientists warn that Altair could be the final nail in their coffin.

Meanwhile, in northern L.A. County, Tejon Ranch is seeking entitlemen­ts to build the massive Centennial sprawl project, which will destroy some of California’s last remaining native grasslands.

To save our region’s besieged bastions of biodiversi­ty, local government­s need to ensure new developmen­t does not take us backward. J.P. Rose Santa Monica The writer is a staff attorney at the Center for Biological Diversity.

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