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Bringing Nature Home: How You Can Sustain Wildlife with Native Plants (2007)

di Douglas W. Tallamy

Altri autori: Vedi la sezione altri autori.

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5791541,495 (4.49)52
In Bringing Nature Home, Doug Tallamy encourages the use of native plants in gardening. This book asks and answers questions for modern gardeners inclined to good stewardship. How can we adjust our planting palette to be both beautiful and envitonmentally useful? How much more does a local oak species contribute to habitat richness then an out-of-ecological-context exotic tree? What do violets and fritillary butterflies, or pawpaws and zebra swallowtails have in common? Where might tomorrow's species come from?… (altro)
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» Vedi le 52 citazioni

This book was full of information about native plants, the creatures they support, and why it is important to plant native rather than alien plants. I am in the process of planning what to add to my tiny suburban lot to support pollinators, etc. and this was helpful. ( )
  Wren73 | Mar 4, 2022 |
A book that everyone concerned about the environment or global warming should have on their bookshelf or at least check out of the library and read. ( )
  BobVTReader | Mar 3, 2021 |
How native plants sustain wildlife in our gardens
  jhawn | Jul 31, 2017 |
Tallamy makes a strong case for homeowners to incorporate native plants in their yards since native ecosystems are so fragmented by development that their ability to sustain native insect and bird populations is waning. Alien species that are typically planted by homeowners do not fulfill the same functions as native plant species. Hopefully people will abandon alien plants in favor of native plants before it is too late. ( )
1 vota Cricket856 | Jan 25, 2016 |
This is one of those paradigm shifting books. So, do you want the local insects to eat holes in your leaves? Resoundingly, YES! If you want a healthy ecosystem, you have to encourage all of the local life; you can't be particular and selective. And to keep the whole thing churning correctly, you can't displace the traditional foods of even the smallest members of the system. Witness the Monarch butterfly crisis because farmers have been eradicating milkweed from much of the US heartland. Grow those weeds. More importantly, grow all the local plants that the local animals rely on. One of the reasons some imported varieties do so outsize well is that they don't have their native nibblers here. That's not a good ecosystem.
This is a must-read for all people concerned with the ecosphere remaining alive. ( )
2 vota 2wonderY | Nov 30, 2015 |
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Nome dell'autoreRuoloTipo di autoreOpera?Stato
Tallamy, Douglas W.autore primariotutte le edizioniconfermato
Darke, RickPrefazioneautore secondarioalcune edizioniconfermato
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Gardeners enjoy their hobby for many reasons: a love of plants and nature, the satisfaction that comes from beautifying home and community, the pleasures of creative effort, the desire to collect rare or unusual species, and the healthful benefits of exercise and outdoor air. (Chapter 1)
Occasionally we encounter a concept so obvious and intuitive that we have never thought to articulate it, so close to our noses that we could not see it, so entangled with our everyday experiences that we did not recognize it. (Preface)
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The 2009 edition, titled "Bringing nature home : how you can sustain wildlife with native plants," says it is updated and expanded from the 2007 "Bringing Nature Home: How Native Plants Sustain Wildlife in Our Gardens," but a line by line comparison shows the books to be identical. The photos and tables have not been changed, except for slight adjustments in formatting. The only expansion is Appendix 1. The original book lists four regions - Mid-Atlantic, Southeast, Southwest, and Pacific Northwest. The expanded version adds lists for New England and Midwest and Eastern Great Plains. And these lists copy many of the same species listed in adjacent regions. The Updated and Expanded label is bogus.
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In Bringing Nature Home, Doug Tallamy encourages the use of native plants in gardening. This book asks and answers questions for modern gardeners inclined to good stewardship. How can we adjust our planting palette to be both beautiful and envitonmentally useful? How much more does a local oak species contribute to habitat richness then an out-of-ecological-context exotic tree? What do violets and fritillary butterflies, or pawpaws and zebra swallowtails have in common? Where might tomorrow's species come from?

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