It’s April! Celebrate Native Plant Month

Fill Your Landscape with Native Plants to Sustain Our Native Wildlife

April is officially Native Plant Month, and the Ewing Green Team encourages you to fill your garden with beautiful NJ natives this spring.

Benefits

Native plants play a critical role in supporting a healthy environment and thriving wildlife populations. They are also underrated beauties that, once established, weather the vicissitudes of climate change better than non-natives.  They generally have deeper root systems, which can search down for water in times of drought such as we are experiencing now.  They also anchor in and absorb stormwater runoff during times of excess rain, all while offering support in terms of food, cover, and shelter to our declining wildlife populations.  They require fewer artificial inputs:  no fertilizers, pesticides, and herbicides, no soil amendments, and limited watering.  Finally, they offer a truer enjoyment of the natural world as we experience not only its beauty but also a deeper connection to nature as we observe our landscape used as habitats.  We urge you to plant natives because wildlife matters and is worth protecting.

What exactly are native plants? And why are they important?

Plants are considered to be native to an area where they occurred naturally over time and developed symbiotic relationships with insects and other wildlife that have evolved with them.  This may take hundreds of years in a particular area or region.  A generally accepted definition includes only plants found in this country before European settlement.  And, plants that are native to other areas of the country such as the west or northwest, may be native to the United States, but are not considered to native to our area in New Jersey.  Some plants may have a very wide native geographic range, and others may be much more limited.  When selecting plants for your garden, it is important to pay attention to their native range and to choose plants that are native to our Central Jersey area (see the Native Plant Society of NJ lists).

Keystone Natives

While our NJ natives always provide sustenance for some wildlife, there are some that provide special ecosystem value for their relative biomass, supporting the greatest number of wildlife species.  They are called keystone native plants and are critical to the food web, and necessary for many wildlife to complete their life cycles.    Every region of the country has different native plant communities.  (Here in Ewing, we are in the Eastern Temperate Forests, Ecoregion 8. )  

 

If you have the room, you will get the biggest wildlife bang for your buck if you join us in our 250 Tree Campaign and plant a native tree.  The Red oak (Quercus rubra) is NJ’s state tree and is particularly beautiful, but there are numerous oaks that are native to our state that provide great wildlife value.  The Northern red oak grows up to 100 feet tall and is a good choice for a street tree because it is salt resistant.   Oaks in general support over 436 species of caterpillars alone.  Willows (in the shrub category) support 289 species.  And then there are the flowering perennials.  Top among them are the goldenrod and asters, Black-eyed Susans, and more.  This author particularly loves the perennials that flower later in the season as they support butterflies and other insects as they begin their fall migrations or prepare for the winter hibernation. 

Ewing residents can make a difference in our home landscapes.  As invasive species overrun more and more of both our cultivated and wild spaces, native species that support local biodiversity play an increasingly important role.  We ask that during Native Plant Month you dedicate some space to native plantings, whether it be a container, your patio, or yard and help sustain our wildlife.

Leave a comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.