The Commercial Appeal

Gardening’s new ethos: Help the planet (and look good, too)

- By Katherine Roth

From the biggest botanical gardens to the smallest backyard plots and terraces, there’s a movement under way to make gardens work harder for the environmen­t.

“It’s no longer enough for a garden to just look pretty. Every garden needs to do more, and every garden matters,” said Douglas Tallamy, a professor in the department of entomology and wildlife ecology at the University of Delaware.

Because of global warming and habitat destructio­n, he said, “Today, gardens need to support life, sequester carbon, feed pollinator­s and manage water. It’s a lot to ask, but it doesn’t have to look messy, and it may be the key to our survival.”

For many people who aren’t sure what they can do about climate change, home gardens provide an opportunit­y to make a palpable difference.

That sense of purpose is creating a change in garden aesthetics, with a more natural look and more emphasis on drought-tolerant and wildlife-friendly plants.

“It’s one of the few things an individual can do to mitigate climate change. The cumulative impact on the environmen­t is huge, plus it’s easy, affordable and fun,” said Ann Savageau, who ripped out most of her lawn in drought-parched Davis, California, a year ago and replanted with desert grasses and other native plants.

“The increase we’ve seen in pollinator­s, butterflie­s and birds at our house is really exciting, and we reduced our water usage by two thirds,” she said.

Whereas there used to be enough land for wildlife and humans to exist separately, it’s become essential that we share habitats, Tallamy and Rick Darke argue in their book, “The Living Landscape: Designing for Beauty and Biodiversi­ty in the Home Garden” (Timber Press, 2014).

“Unless we share our space with nature, the plants on which bees, caterpilla­rs, butterflie­s, birds and other wildlife depend will not survive,” Tallamy said.

Earth-friendly gardens consist mostly of native species, on which local wildlife depends, experts say.

“Gardening for wildlife, especially birds, is really the hot thing now in horticultu­re and gardening. The trend is toward naturalist­ic garden design, with native plants. It’s a High Line kind of a look,” said Kristin Schleiter, associate vice president for outdoor gardens and senior curator at the New York Botanical Garden.

The High Line, a New York City park and garden that runs along a strip of old elevated track, “does symbolize a newer aesthetic in purposeful, naturalize­d gardening,” said Tom Smarr, its director of horticultu­re.

About half the plants are natives and the other half are self-seeded species, which require relatively little maintenanc­e and water. “There’s way more forgivenes­s and durability about it,” he said.

A few specific ways that home gardeners can go easy on the planet:

PLANT AN OAK TREE

Oaks sequester lots of carbon, have enormous root systems that help manage water and, according to Tallamy and Darke, are fantastic at supporting wildlife. “There are 557 species of caterpilla­rs in the Mid-Atlantic states, and they’re all bird food. The birds eat all the caterpilla­rs to support their young, so you don’t need to worry about defoliatio­n.”

FEED THE POLLINATOR­S

Tallamy warns that without pollinator­s, 80 percent to 90 percent of all plants would be lost, and that gardeners should focus on plants that feed the estimated 4,000 species of native bees. Pollinator­friendly gardens feature a sequence of native flowering plants, so that from April through September something’s always blooming. Mountain mint, sunflowers, native holly, sweet pepper bush and goldenrod are all great for pollinator­s, Tallamy said. Further west, blazing star and milkweed are good choices.

Schleiter said that early spring can be especially tough for bees. For early bloomers, she recommends Lyndera, a native bush with great fall color, and also dogwood.

MINIMIZE LAWN, CONCRETE AND NON-NATIVE ORNAMENTAL SPECIES

“Around 92 percent of our suburban lots are lawn, and that’s the worst you can do,” Tallamy said, adding that concrete seems to be our “default landscapin­g” and ornamental Asian plant varieties have little to offer native wildlife.

“In the typical American yard, 80 percent of the plants are from China. That’s not a functionin­g ecosystem,” he said.

Even apartment dwellers can help, by planting native species on roofs and terraces.

Schleiter said: “Really think about the amount of chemical that’s put on our lawns. If you’re not using all of your lawn, just let the grass grow out and maybe put in some native perennials. It all adds up.”

AVOID PESTICIDES

“If you’re planting a garden for bees and butterflie­s, don’t use pesticides that will kill bees and butterflie­s,” warned Schleiter. “It sounds obvious, but people do it all the time. You have to be extra sure that when you buy a plant at the nursery, it hasn’t been sprayed with any pesticides. Nurseries do it a lot, and you need to be extremely careful.”

 ?? RICK DARKE/TIMBER PRESS ?? A mature oak in a home garden provides ecosystem services necessary to human health and also provides shelter and sustenance for local and migratory wildlife, according to “The Living Landscape,” a book by Rick Darke and Doug Tallamy.
RICK DARKE/TIMBER PRESS A mature oak in a home garden provides ecosystem services necessary to human health and also provides shelter and sustenance for local and migratory wildlife, according to “The Living Landscape,” a book by Rick Darke and Doug Tallamy.

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