This outstanding article related to #NativePlants has many useful points for preparing for the next growing season and improving the #environment in general. I'll pull out some main ideas in a threaded series this week.

First up: Insects are the primary conduits for energy to get from plants to animals. And lowly caterpillars turn out to be the most important.

Our job, gardeners, is to plant more caterpillar food!

1/🧡

#Gardening #Urbanism #Biodiversity #Science

https://www.smithsonianmag.com/science-nature/why-you-should-cultivate-native-plants-in-your-garden-180982823/

Why You Should Grow Native Plants in Your Garden

Entomologist Doug Tallamy explains how doing so can help insects and birds

Smithsonian Magazine

Per the article☝️, the population of American birds has declined by 30% since the 1970s. To help, you must support the bugs that the birds need to reproduce. But only 14% of #NativePlants generate 90% of the yummy caterpillars that drive food webs!

So are you planting these?

At the link provided, you can pull up a list of what *you* need to plant in your ecoregion. Scroll down and click on your list.

[Edit: Updated link, added hashtags]

2/🧡
#HabitatGardening #Gardening #Environment #Conservation #Birds #Biodiversity #Science

https://www.nwf.org/Native-Plant-Habitats/Plant-Native/Why-Native/Keystone-Plants-by-Ecoregion

When I pulled up the list ☝️for my ecoregion, I was very surprised.

The best things for me to plant/support are:
πŸ¦‹ Two species of Oaks
πŸ¦‹ Blueberries, Plums, Cherries
πŸ¦‹ Certain Sunflowers and Asters

These could drastically improve #biodiversity in my garden and help build back bird populations!

I will be adjusting my plans for Spring planting accordingly. Please join me.

3/🧡
#Gardening #Environment #Birds #Science #Nature #ScienceMastodon

More on #biodiversity and #birds: Even though butterflies and moths can be seen on any flower, their caterpillars specialize on *particular* plants. They need your help to get the #NativePlants that they consume.

πŸ¦‹ See the site below for plants for your area (N.A. only for now).

πŸ¦‹ One thing anyone can do is to make sure there are leaves under trees for Winter/Spring development of caterpillars.

⬆️ More caterpillars more birds! ⬆️

4/🧡

#Gardening #Environment #Science

https://nativeplantfinder.nwf.org/Plants

Well, overwhelming interest in this thread! Thank you!

I'm planning for the 2024 garden, selecting #NativePlants that maximize #biodiversity. You might even have your own advice or questions. Great!

πŸ¦‹ This is the new step 1: start with a list of *keystone plants* appropriate for my location.

πŸ¦‹ It gives me two lists: plants and trees. Trees are easier. I should be able to plant the top 2 types of trees that support at least 488 species! πŸ’ͺ

5/🧡

#Gardening #Wildlife

https://www.nwf.org/NativePlantFinder/Plants

National Wildlife Federation - Native Plant Finder

This website will help you find the best native plants specifically for your area that attract butterflies and moths and the birds that feed on their caterpillars, based on the scientific research of Dr. Douglas Tallamy.

National Wildlife Federation - Native Plant Finder

Live tooting 2024 #garden planning

I found listed six "Keystone"⬆️ #NativePlants that I have never planted but which support hundreds of species more than what I do now! Wow! Haven't been this excited about planning in years.

πŸ¦‹ Had to go to state extension service for details on habitat, but all seem to fit into my yard.

πŸ¦‹ Good, because together, they provide blooms all season. (#Bloomscrolling followers have needs!)

6/🧡

#Gardening #Environment #WildlifeGardening
#pollinators

Continuing to plan my #NativePlant purchases…
Taking my list of Keystone plants, I have completed some research on availability.

πŸ¦‹I normally do mass plantings, so I look for seeds as an economical choice, but they also give me ability to stagger my plantings.

πŸ¦‹Mass plantings attract #pollinators better and provide more space for more caterpillars to drive food webs. More ⬆️

Who else is buying seeds now? Plan to get any natives?

7/🧡
#WildlifeGardening #Gardening
#WildlifeGarden

Continuing the #NativePlant odyssey!

🌻 I now possess the ordered Keystone Plant seeds and have planted some of a goldenrod species.

πŸ¦‹ These needed to be kept for *60 days* in wet cool treatment, which was a surprise to me because it was not mentioned in the general description on the nursery's web site. Clear instructions were provided by the nursery, though.

8/ 🧡

#BiodiversityGardening #KeystonePlants #Biodiversity
#WildlifeGardening #Gardening
#WildlifeGarden

πŸ™ Phase 1 appears to have failed. I planted seeds in containers and none came up. Not sure of germination rate for these, so I will try again with more seed starting mix.

🏑 🌿 Also, I will plant directly into prepared ground. I have hundreds of seeds and will plant them in different ways and in different areas to see what works and to ensure as many as possible survive.

9/ 🧡

#KeystonePlants #Biodiversity
#BiodiversityGardening #Biodiversity
#WildlifeGardening #Gardening
#WildlifeGarden

@joewynne This soil doesn't look like the darker homemade one I use for seed starts. There is too much pebbles & wood in it. I use a soil sifter as part of creating nutrients rich soil, strictly for seed starts.

Do you use composting worm bins?

@msquebanh
You are, of course, correct in your characterization of the current mix in the container.

There are several reasons why the germination was suboptimal. All can be fixed on second attempt. πŸ’ͺ Eternal optimism!

I have composted virtually all biomass in my home for decades, but do not use worm bins.

@joewynne Please look into starting worm bins as it makes a significant difference to your gardening success or failures. Doing more composting & working with green manure & aged manure can take you into higher productive gardening fairly quickly, once you get your DIY systems established. It usually only takes 1 season to see visually evident benefits πŸ‘©β€πŸŒΎπŸ‘
@msquebanh
Thank you very much for the recommendation!
@joewynne You're most welcome. I love how you keep trying to grow plants! I support your efforts πŸ‘Œ