Native flowers help birds, insects, ecosystem

By Dean Fosdick, For The Associated Press
Friday, October 16, 2009 | No comments posted.

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Flower fanciers have generally forsaken native plants over the years for the fashionable and the flashy, but the robust perennials are quickly becoming garden chic and the center of an ongoing conservation campaign.

The handbook of the natural landscape movement may be Douglas Tallamy’s “Bringing Nature Home: How Native Plants Sustain Wildlife in Our Gardens” (2007, Timber Press), which brings into sharp focus the relationships between plants and wildlife.

“Plants generate the food for all the terrestrial life on the planet,” Tallamy, a professor and chair of the Department of Entomology and Wildlife Ecology at the University of Delaware, said in an interview.

“Insects and birds are disappearing because we’re starving them with the wrong kinds of plants when we landscape,” he said.

It’s understandable that people want new and different kinds of plants for their gardens, but alien species don’t contribute much, if anything, toward the care and feeding of wildlife, he said.

“Insects are not adaptable. Their physiology is locked into the plants with which they’ve co-evolved,” Tallamy said. “It’s like the Monarch butterfly gets its nourishment primarily from milkweeds. If we start spraying all the milkweeds, the monarchs can’t simply go off and start feeding on oak trees.”

Miriam Goldberger, who with her husband, Paul Jenkins, owns and operates Wildflower Farm Inc. near Coldwater, Ontario, puts it another way: “A lot of my hybridized plants are like junk food compared to the natives. They don’t have much dietary value.”

But one person’s wildflower is another person’s weed. Time for some definitions:

“Natives” are considered plants indigenous to North America before European settlement.

“Weeds” are any plants growing out of place.

A “forb” is a wildflower that grows without human involvement.

“Naturalized aliens” are plants that have taken hold in certain areas but that should be avoided because they crowd out and contaminate native gene pools. (Queen Anne’s lace, Chicory, Oxeye daisy, are some naturalized aliens.)

“Common milkweed is on Ontario’s noxious weeds list, yet several (provincial) departments purchase milkweeds from us to support the Monarchs,” Goldberger said. “This weeds-wildflower debate needs a little more thinking and a little more homework as people gain knowledge about natural relationships.”

Some things to consider when buying and growing native plants:

n Beware the inexpensive “show and go mixes” that bloom heavily for a year but then die back because they contain so many annuals.

n Shop for wildflowers rather than dig them up. Plants taken from the wild “generally don’t survive,” Goldberger said. “Better to get nursery-grown natives that do well in habitats and hardiness zones matching your own.”

n Choose bare-root plants or cuttings if you want the fast and easy. Go with seeds if you have large areas to cover. “Remember that these are perennials, so it may take some time to get them going,” said Bill Carter, president of Prairie Moon Nursery near Winona, Minn. “First-year growth (from seed) may not be much at all or very slow in coming. Many of these plants need two or three years to reach blooming size, but really take off once established.”

n Naturalized gardens may look more disheveled than formal flower beds, especially after the flowers fade, but don’t be quick to remove the spent plants. Birds will eat their seeds; insects will shelter in their hollow stalks.

“I got into growing and selling natives because they’re so beautiful, so low maintenance and drought tolerant,” said Goldberger, whose sales are growing at a rate of 20 percent to 30 percent per year. “It’s even better now because I can see the wider view.”

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On the Net:

For more about gardening with native plants, see this U.S. Department of Agriculture Web site: http://www.nrcs.usda.gov/feature/backyard/wildhab.html.

For planting suggestions, tap the Prairie Moon Nursery reference guide: http://www.prairiemoon.com

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You can contact Dean Fosdick at deanfosdick@netscape.net
Here are some native plants preferred by:

Adult butterflies: nectar and pollen from common milkweed (Asclepias syriaca), wild onions (Allium), purple coneflowers (Echineacea purpurea), wild blue phlox (Phlox divaricata), prairie clover (Petalostemum candidum), black-eyed susans (Rudbeckia hirta), showy goldenrods (Solidago speciosa), prairie spiderwort (Tradescantia bracteata) and sky blue asters (Aster azureus), among a host of others.


Butterfly and moth larvae: violets, milkweed, butterfly weed, sheep sorrel and grapes, among others. Also consider stocking up on tulip poplar, aspen, oak, maple and willow trees.


Hummingbirds: columbine (Aquilegia canadensis), cardinal flower (Lobelia cardinalis), larkspurs (Delphiniums), milk vetch (Astragalus canadensis) and harebell (Campanula rotundifolia).


Bees: Brightly colored blooms - white, yellow and blues ahead of red, which entomologists believe they can’t see. Try clover, lupine, sunflowers, yarrow, poppies, purple coneflowers and coreopsis.


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On the Net:

The Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center: http://www.wildflower.org
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