Why Landscape with Native Plants?

 

Most of us are aware that many birds are fond of the fruits and berries found on non-native plants as well as natives.

One of the ways non-native plants spread and become invasive is through the guts of birds. Birds act as seed dispersers moving from one location to another taking invasive plants with them from your backyard to another backyard and often, into wild spaces

Non-native plants ultimately cannot sustain bird populations because they do not support native insects. Native plants act as host plants and nectar sources for an insect's entire life cycle, from larvae to adult.

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Blueberry plants, such as this lowbush blueberry (Vaccinium angustifolium - myrtilloides) support 288 species of Lepidoptera.
Photo:www.hort.uconn.edu/plants

Native insects have evolved such that in their larval form they feed on a small number of plants and do not see non-native plants as food. For example, entomologist Doug Tallamy writes that while the Kousa dogwood (Cornus kousa), a species from China, supports no insect herbivores in North America, our native flowering dogwood (Cornus florida) supports 117 species of moths and butterflies! Oaks are hosts to an astonishing 532 species of caterpillars.

Many invasive insects thrive here because birds do not recognize them as food. Perhaps you've heard of the gypsy moths that are destroying our hardwood forests or experienced hemlock woolly adelgid in your own backyard. Birds seek out indigenous insect species

Healthy insect populations are vital for birds during spring migration. During nesting season 96% of songbirds feed their young on insect protein.

It starts with native plants. NATIVE plants + NATIVE insects = healthier bird populations.

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During spring migration black and white warblers can be seen crawling up and down tree branches forraging for insects in bark crevices. Photo: education.eol.org

Menunkatuck's Native Plant Sale for the Birds offers trees and shrubs that will host native insects and feed birds.

Planting native trees and shrubs targets all five of the Audubon at Home principles:

  • Plant Native Species
  • Remove Exotic Invasive Plants
  • Conserve Water
  • Protect Water Quality
  • Eliminate or Reduce Pesticide Use

 

Image: www.npwrc.usgs.gov/resource/insects/cateast/datadrex.htm