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Showing posts with label gardening. Show all posts
Showing posts with label gardening. Show all posts

Thursday, November 11, 2021

Leave the Leaves!

Fallen leaves are not 'litter', but are food and shelter for many forms of wildlife.

This time of year, as the days shorten and leaves begin to fall, we can’t seem to help wanting to tidy up our yards and gardens by constantly mowing, blowing, and edging.  However, one of the most valuable things you can do to support pollinators and other beneficial species is to provide them with winter cover in the form of fallen leaves and dead plant material.

The Texas Alligator Lizard breeds in October or November, with females delaying egg
development during hibernation, laying their eggs in leaf litter beginning in February.

Leaves on the ground are not litter, which is unfortunately how most people see them.  Rather, they are food and shelter for many species of bees, beetles, butterflies, moths and other native creatures.  They are also habitat for beneficial snails, spiders, worms, millipedes, mites, and other small species that support the larger species such as birds and mammals that use them for food.

The larva or caterpillar of the Dusky-blue Groundstreak butterfly feeds on decaying leaves.

The vast majority of butterfly and moth species overwinter in the form of an egg, caterpillar, chrysalis, cocoon, or adult.  Some tuck themselves into a pile of leaves for protection from predators or the cold.  Others lay their eggs on fallen oak leaves, which becomes their first meal when they hatch in the spring.  Cocoons and chrysalises are often disguised with dried leaves, keeping them safe by helping to blend in and avoid predation.  Some species of lizard lay their eggs in fallen leaves, and many species of native bees and Sphinx moth larvae burrow into shallow soil for the winter, each attempting to survive the colder months covered in a protective blanket of leaves. 

The pupa (or immature inactive form between larva and adult)
of several species of Sphinx Moths, like this Virginia Creeper Sphinx,  
spend the winter a few inches under the soil, protected by a blanket of leaves. 

So how do you maintain your property while leaving the leaves?  First, if you must keep your lawn free of leaves, use a manual rake (it’s good exercise, too) and make a leaf pile in a corner of your yard or pile them up around your trees, shrubs, and perennials.  Don’t shred the leaves but keep them whole, let the leaf pile break down naturally, and leave the leaves that have already fallen in your beds and yard edges.  This free mulch provides you with valuable organic matter, builds up healthy soil, insulates tender roots, retains moisture, and helps to keep weeds at bay.   You can always decide to remove the leaves in the spring, once you wait late enough in the season so as not to destroy any overwintering species.

An adult Snowberry Clearwing Moth emerges from the leaf-covered ground in spring. 

And if the human side of things is more of a motivator for you, consider that the U.S. Environmental Agency has reported that mowers, edgers, and blowers used to remove leaves emit 27 million tons of air pollutants each year, not to mention the noise pollution that they create.  So do consider leaving the leaves this year, it’ll be less work for you and much better for the wildlife!

The Xerces Society encourages everyone to 
Leave the Leaves!




Monday, March 11, 2019

Plant Natives!

Non-native, invasive, Nandina - Please avoid planting this and consider removing it from
your landscape.  It is a pest in our parks and preserves.
Spring is the ideal time to think about planting, and how you manage your garden or landscape can have an effect on the overall health of the soil, air, water and habitat for native wildlife as well as our human community. Help conserve and improve the quality of these resources by using sustainable gardening practices such as mulching and composting, reducing or eliminating lawn areas, xeriscaping (planting native, drought-tolerant plants), installing rain barrels, and removing non-native invasive plants and restoring native ones.

The U.S. government defines an invasive plant species as one “that is not native to the ecosystem under consideration and whose introduction is likely to cause economic or environmental harm or harm to human health.” These species grow outside desired boundaries, out-competing native species, and spread by seeds, berries, spores, runners, rhizomes, and stems. Some can be easily transported long distances, and every year millions of our tax dollars and thousands of volunteer hours are spent trying to eradicate them.

Many of these plants have already invaded our preserves and greenbelts in Austin, originating in our landscapes, escaping cultivation and spreading into the wild. Invasive species may grow faster, taller, or wider and shade out native species. Many stay green later into the season or leaf out earlier, giving them an advantage over natives. They can change the vertical and horizontal structure of ecosystems, alter hydrology, and disrupt nutrient cycles, all of which can have devastating effects on native plants and animals.

Although invasive exotics may offer birds fruit, squirrels nuts, and hummingbirds and butterflies nectar, they do not provide the entire range of seasonal habitat benefits that an appropriate locally native species will provide. If we want not only to satisfy our desires to attract wildlife, but also to restore the critical, often unseen, small pieces in our ecosystems, we need to bring back our locally native plants. These plants are not only attractive to humans, they also meet the food and cover needs of all wildlife species: bees, wasps, butterflies, grasshoppers, bugs, beetles, spiders, and thousands of others that sustain and support food webs which songbirds, salamanders, bats, toads, and box turtles more visibly demonstrate.

Escarpment Black Cherry is a beautiful native tree that makes a great replacement for the

highly invasive privets or ligustrums.
Aside from attracting a diversity of wildlife, the use of native plants minimizes the impact our landscapes have on the natural environment around us. They reduce water consumption, eliminate the need for chemical fertilizers and pesticides, and limit the competition from invasive exotics. This results in a much healthier habitat—water, soil, and air—for humans and animals alike, and is less costly, too. Invite wildlife to put on a show in your backyard by replacing the invasives in your landscape, and encourage your neighbors to do the same.


Non-Native/Invasive Plant(s)
Some Native & Adapted Alternative(s)
Bamboo 
Wax Myrtle (Morella cerifera)
Yaupon Holly (Ilex vomitoria)
Bamboo Muhly (Muhlenbergia dumosa)
Chinaberry
Chinquapin Oak (Quercus muehlenbergii)
Texas Red Oak (Quercus buckleyi)
Chinese Tallow Tree 
Bigtooth Maple (Acer grandidentatum)
Lacey Oak (Quercus laceyi)
Elephant Ear
Arrowhead (Sagittaria latifolia )
Crinum Lily (Crinum americanum)
Pigeonberry (Rivina humilis)
Frogfuit (Phyla nodiflora)
Horseherb (Calyptocarpus vialis)
Giant Cane
Roughleaf Dogwood (Cornus drummondii)
Yaupon Holly (Ilex vomitoria)
Japanese Honeysuckle
Coral Honeysuckle (Lonicera sempervirens)
Passion Vine (Passiflora foetida or incarnate or lutea or tenuiloba)
Rock Rose (Pavonia lasiopetala)
Holly Fern
River Fern (Thelypteris kunthii)
Kudzu, English Ivy, Vinca
Virginia Creeper (Parthenocissus quinquefolia)
Trumpet Vine (Campsis radicans)
Coral Vine (Antigonon leptopus)
Ligustrum (all species) or Common Privet
Evergreen Sumac (Rhus virens)
Barbados Cherry (Malpighia glabra)
Yaupon Holly (Ilex vomitoria)
Possumhaw Holly (Ilex decidua)
Texas Sage (Leucophyllum frutescens)
Cherry Laurel (Prunus caroliniana)
Black Cherry (Prunus serotina)
Mimosa
Desert Willow (Chilopsis linearis)
Texas Redbud (Cercis canadensis var. texensis  )
Elbowbush (Forestiera pubescens )
Nandina or Heavenly Bamboo
Texas Lantana (Lantana urticoides)
Bush Germander (Teucrium fruticans)
Texas Sage (Leucophyllum frutescens)
Paper or White Mulberry
Red Mulberry (Morus rubra)
Texas Persimmon (Diospyros texana)
Possumhaw Holly (Ilex decidua)
Cherry Laurel (Prunus caroliniana)
Pyracantha 
Yaupon Holly (Ilex vomitoria)
Possumhaw Holly (Ilex decidua)
Evergreen Sumac (Rhus virens)
Red-tipped or Chinese Photinia
Evergreen Sumac (Rhus virens)
Carolina Buckthorn (Frangula caroliniana)
Yaupon Holly (Ilex vomitoria)
Russian Olive
Texas Persimmon (Diospyros texana)
St. Augustine Grass
Buffalo Grass (Bouteloua dactyloides)
Tamarisk or Salt Cedar
Bald Cypress (Taxodium distichum)
Arizona Cypress (Cupressus arizonica)
Tree of Heaven
Chinquapin Oak (Quercus muehlenbergii)
Lacey Oak (Quercus laceyi)
Vitex or Chastetree
Texas Pistachio (Pistacia mexicana)
Mexican Buckeye (Ungnadia speciosa)
Wisteria
Passion Vine (Passiflora foetida or incarnata or lutea or tenuiloba)
Trumpet Vine (Campsis radicans)