With the U.S. population nearing three hundred
and six million, and growing by
more than eight thousand every
day, we have to get serious about
habitat for our fellow creatures.
By Doug Tallamy

Whitefaced Meadowhawk on Liatris
Photo by: John Arthur and Pamela Deerwood
Chances are, you have never thought
of your garden – indeed, of all of the
space on your land – as a wildlife preserve
that represents the last chance
we have for sustaining plants and animals that
were once common throughout the United States.
That is exactly the role our suburban landscapes
are now playing, and will play even more critically
in the near future. If this is
news to you, it’s not your fault.
We were taught from childhood
that gardens are for beauty; they
are a chance to express our artistic talents,
to have fun with, and relax in. And, whether
we like it or not, the way we landscape our
properties is taken by our neighbors as a statement
of our wealth and social status.
No one has taught us that we
have forced the plants and animals
that evolved in North America (our
nation’s biodiversity)
to depend more and more on human-dominated landscapes
for their continued existence. We have always
thought that biodiversity was happy somewhere
out there – “in nature” – in
our local woodlot, or perhaps our national parks,
or best of all “in the rain forest.” We
have heard nothing about the
rate at which species are disappearing
from our neighborhoods, towns,
counties, and states.
We have never been taught how
vital biodiversity is for our own well-being.
We Have Taken It All
Autumn Monarch
Photo by
Vicki Bonk |
The population of the United
States, now nearing three hundred
and six million people, has doubled since most
of us were kids, and continues to grow by eight
thousand forty-six people per day. This, coupled
with our love affair with the car, and our quest
to own ever-larger homes, has fueled urbanized
development that continues to sprawl over two
million additional acres per
year (the size of
Yellowstone National Park). We have connected
all of our developments with four million miles
of roads, and their combined paved surface could
occupy roughly the area of Pennsylvania.
Somewhere along the way we decided
to convert most of our leisure and
decorative places, both at work and at home,
into huge expanses of lawn. So far we have planted
some forty million acres in lawn. Each weekend
we mow to a one-inch height an area the size
of Missouri or Oklahoma, and congratulate ourselves
on a job well done.
To make things worse, the little
woodlots and “open spaces” that
we have not paved over or manicured
are far from pristine. Nearly all
are second-growth that has been thoroughly
invaded by alien plants like autumn
olive, multiflora rose, Oriental
bittersweet, and Japanese honeysuckle.
So far, over thirty-four hundred
species of alien plants have invaded
nearly two hundred million acres
of the United States.
To nature lovers these are horrifying
statistics. I stress them so that
we can clearly understand the
challenge before us. We have turned
fifty-four percent of the lower forty-eight
states into cities and suburbs, and
forty-one percent more into various
forms of agriculture. That’s
right: We humans have taken ninety-five
percent of nature and made it unnatural.
Most of the five percent we have
left pristine is either too high
or too dry to support much of anything.
So what does it matter? Are there
consequences to turning so much land
into the park-like settings humans
enjoy? Absolutely. Both for biodiversity
and for us. Our fellow creatures
need food and shelter to survive
and reproduce, and in too many places
we have eliminated both. State natural
heritage folks estimate that as many
as thirty-three thousand species
of plants and animals in this country
are “imperiled.” Many
of those that haven’t suffered local extinction
are now too rare to perform their
ecosystem role effectively. These
can be considered functionally
extinct.
The song birds that brighten
spring mornings have been in decline
since the nineteen sixties, having lost forty
percent of their numbers. Birds that breed in
meadows are in even more trouble. Once-common
species such as the northern bobwhite, eastern
meadowlark, field sparrow, and grasshopper sparrow
have declined eighty-two, seventy-two, sixty-eight,
and sixty-five percent, in total
numbers, and are completely absent from many
areas that used to support healthy populations.
Evening grosbeaks have declined ninety percent
in fifteen years because we are leveling their
boreal forest breeding grounds to make junk
mail. For most of us, hearing such numbers triggers
a passing sadness, but few people feel personally
threatened by the loss of biodiversity.
Why We Need Biodiversity
Conversation
Photo by John Arthur |
Here is why every one of us should
feel threatened. Here is why it matters.
Losses to biodiversity are a clear
sign that our own life-support systems
are failing. The ecosystems that
support us – that determine the carrying
capacity of our Earth and our local spaces – are
run by biodiversity. It is biodiversity
that generates oxygen and clean
water, creates topsoil out of
rock, buffers extreme weather
events like droughts and floods,
pollinates our crops, and recycles
the mountains of garbage we create
every day.
Now, with human-induced climate
change threatening the planet, it
is biodiversity that could suck that carbon
out of the air and sequester it in living plants
if given half a chance. It is plants that turn
sunlight into all of the food that supports
life on Earth, yet we continue to reduce complex
forests into lawns the world over.
Humans cannot live as the only
species on this planet because it
is other species that create the ecosystem services
essential to our survival. Every time we force
a species to extinction we promote our own demise.
Biodiversity is not optional.
Parks Are Not Enough
I am often asked why the habitats
we have preserved within our park
system are not enough to save most species from
extinction. Research has shown that the area
required to sustain biodiversity is pretty much
the same as the area required to generate it
in the first place. Put another way: Species
are lost in the same proportion with which a
habitat is reduced in size. The consequence of
this simple relationship is profound. Since we
have taken ninety-five percent of the United
States from nature, we can expect to lose ninety-five
percent of the species that once lived here,
along with the services they have provided us.
The good news is that extinction
takes a while, so if we start sharing
our landscapes with other living things, we should
be able to save much of the biodiversity that
still exists.
Start Locally: Redesigning Suburbia
Scientific facts, deduced from
thousands of studies about how energy
moves through food webs, outline for us what
it will take to give our local animals what they
need to survive and reproduce on our properties:
Native plants, and lots of them.
Here is the general reasoning:
• Plants are the source of all energy that
supports life. In other words,
all animals get their energy directly
from plants, or by eating something that has already
eaten a plant.
• Some animals don’t eat plants directly.
They must rely on other animals,
which do eat plants, to transmit
the energy.
• The group of animals most responsible
for passing energy from plants to the animals
that don’t eat plants directly, is insects.
This is what makes insects such
vital components of healthy ecosystems.
So many animals depend on insects
for food (e.g., spiders, reptiles,
amphibians, rodents, bats, and
ninety-six percent of all terrestrial
birds), that removing insects
from an ecosystem spells its
doom.
If you think back on our suburban
landscaping history, getting rid
of insects is exactly what we
have tried to do. For over a
century we have favored ornamental
landscape plants from China and
Europe over those that evolved
right here. Among the reasons
for favoring the imported plants
has been the observation that
they “are
not subject to insect infestation.”
Research now tells us that not
all plants are created equal. Every
plant species protects its leaves
with a species-specific mixture
of chemicals. With few exceptions,
only insect species that have
shared a long evolutionary history
with a particular plant lineage
have developed the physiological
adaptations required to digest
the chemicals in their host’s
leaves. Insects have specialized
over time to eat only the plants
carrying particular chemicals.
When we present insects from
Pennsylvania with plants that
evolved on another continent,
chances are those insects will
be unable to digest them.
We used to think this was good.
Avoid insect infestation by planting
suggested species, and/or spray and kill all
insects that do show up on our plants.
Now we know that an insect that
cannot, for whatever reason, eat
part of a leaf, cannot fulfill its role in the
food web.
Opposites Attract
Photo by John Arthur
Robert Lauer, Sr. |
We have planted Kousa dogwood
(Cornus kousa), a species from
China that supports no insect herbivores,
instead of our native flowering
dogwood (Cornus florida) that supports
one hundred and seventeen species
of moths and butterflies alone.
On hundreds of thousands of acres
we have planted goldenraintree
(Koelreuteria paniculata) from
China, a tree that supports one
caterpillar species, instead of
a variety of our beautiful oaks, and we have
lost the chance to grow five hundred and thirty-four
species of caterpillars, all of
them nutritious bird food. My own
research has shown that native
ornamentals support twenty-nine
times more biodiversity than do alien ornamentals.
Further, it’s
unnerving to learn that eighty-two
percent of the woody invasives
in our country are escapees of
the horticultural industry.
Your Garden Has a Function
In the past we have not designed
gardens that play a critical ecological
role in the landscape, but we must do so in the
future. The importance
of our doing this cannot be overstated. We need to quickly replace unnecessary
lawn with densely planted woodlots in the East
and West, and natural prairies in the Midwest;
whatever can serve as habitat for our local biodiversity.
Homeowners can do this by planting
the borders of their properties with
plants native to their region: In the East, native
trees such as white oaks (Quercus
alba), black willows (Salix
nigra), red maples
(Acer rubrum), green ashes (Fraxinus
pennsylvanica),
black walnuts (Juglans
nigra), river birches
(Betula nigra) and shagbark hickories (Carya
ovata), under-planted with woodies like serviceberry (Amelanchier
canadensis), arrowwood
(Viburnum dentatum), hazelnut (Corylus
americanus),
and blueberries (Vaccinium
spp). Our studies
have shown that even modest increases in the
native plant cover on suburban properties significantly
increases the number and species
of breeding birds, including birds of conservation
concern.
We have also recently demonstrated
that homeowners needn’t worry that native
insects will defoliate their
gardens. A diversity of native
plants will support a diversity
of native insects that, in turn,
support a healthy community of
natural enemies that keeps them
in check. One bluebird pair brings
up to three hundred caterpillars
back their nest every day. You
will be hard-pressed to find any
caterpillars in your yard if you
create habitat for breeding birds. In a recent
study, homeowners who planted natives
exclusively found that only three percent of
the leaves on their properties
were damaged by insects.
As gardeners and stewards of
our land, we have never been so empowered
to help save biodiversity from extinction, and
the need to do so has never been
so great. All we need to do is plant native plants.
_____
Doug Tallamy is Professor and
Chair of Entomology and Wildlife
Ecology at the University of Delaware.
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