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Hemlocks destined to be Dinosaurs

December 15, 2007 by Duncan Brine 1 Comment

Letter from North Carolina: A Death in the Forest: Reporting & Essays: The New Yorker Annotated

 

Excerpts of an abstract–In 1951, an Asian insect known as the hemlock woolly adelgid was discovered near a park in Richmond, Virginia, which contained imported evergreens.

 

Describes how globalization and climate change affect the spread of invasive species.

 

Bayer makes an artificial nicotine insecticide, Imidacloprid, which is injected into the soil and carried through a tree by the root system, killing the feeding bugs.

Filed Under: Climate Change, Insects, Plants, Sustainability, The New Yorker

Peter Del Tredici on sustainability as the standard– a classic article

December 13, 2007 by Duncan Brine Leave a Comment

harvard design magazine • back issue Annotated

Courtesy of Layanee and Garden Rant
Excerpts–

Land managers and others who have to deal with the invasive problem on a daily basis know that often as not the old invasive comes back following eradication (reproducing from root sprouts or seeds), or else a new invader moves in to replace the old one. The only thing that seems to turn this dynamic around is cutting down the invasives, treating them with herbicides, and planting native species in the gaps where the invasives once were. After this, the sites require weeding of invasives for an indefe number of years, at least until the natives are big enough to hold their ground without human assistance.(3)

 

Can we put the invasive species genie back in the bottle, or are we looking at a future in which nature itself becomes a cultivated entity?(5)

 

Native plants are great, but without ongoing care and maintenance, they will die just like all the other plants we try to cultivate.

 

The issue of where a given plant comes from must be secondary to the issue of its future survival. Again, the sad thing about the debate over native versus exotic species is that it has become so polarized. At its most simplistic level, native is equated with good, exotic with bad.

 

What I find particularly depressing about the “native species only” argument is that it ends up denying the inevitability of ecological change. Its underlying assumption is that the plant and animal communities that existed in North America before the Europeans arrived can and should be preserved.

 

From the functional perspective, the presence of invasive species in the landscape can be interpreted as symptoms rather than causes of environmental degradation.

 

As a graceful way out of the native versus exotic debate, I recommend using sustainability as the standard for deciding what to plant.

Filed Under: Sustainability, The Native or Not Knot

Native plant consciousness raising

December 7, 2007 by Duncan Brine Leave a Comment

Garden Rant: Doug Tallamy wants YOU … to plant natives Annotated

 

Excerpts from Garden Rant::

The 3-5% of undisturbed habitat scattered across the U.S. is utterly inadequate to maintain our native species and unless we accommodate them in developed areas, 95% of the plants and animals native to the United States will become extinct. Soon.

 

Our use of alien species that do not sustain our native wildlife, as well our development of formerly undisturbed habitats are the two major factors in causing extinctions.

 

That’s really the elephant in the room here; most gardeners I know personally and most whose blogs I read mix natives with annuals, aliens, and exotics. Tallamy would like to see all-native gardens, although he recommends gradual replacement, isn’t at all preachy about it, and admits the difficulties.

Filed Under: Native Plants, Sustainability, The Native or Not Knot

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