Wildlife in Your Garden. Группа авторов
Читать онлайн книгу.of mycorrhizal fungi and microbes release organic compounds into the soil that feed the plant roots.
In contrast, mowed turf grass adds very little support to the ecosystem, and the soil compacted by riding mowers makes is almost impermeable to water. Herbicides that kill forbs prevent a biodiverse system from establishing itself, and they set off a cycle of spot treatments for symptoms without addressing the underlying systemic malfunctions.
Likewise, removing nature’s nutrient-rich gift—fallen leaves—takes away the soil-enriching and biodiverse benefits that leaf litter provides. Then we have to go out and buy topsoil, fertilizer, and compost; haul it home; and blend it back in to amend the soil. Douglas Tallamy sums up the wasted effort: “Plants make leaves, and we all freak out and get our leaf blowers and our rakes, we rake up all the leaves and put ‘em in bags and treat ‘em like trash. Then we run to Home Depot and buy mulch, fertilizer, hoses, trying to replace the ecosystem services we just threw out, but we can’t replace the arthropods we got rid of.” If we can let leaves stay where they fall or chop them up with a lawn mower and rake them to cover our garden beds, we’ll be on our way to sharing the gardening work with Mother Nature instead of doing all of the work ourselves.
Zinnias add a splash of color and plentiful nectar to your garden.
Switchgrass is a native grass that can grow several feet high.
The ground layer nurtures both plant and animal life.
Understand the Food Web
You’ll read about birdscaping and gardening for beneficial insects later in this book, but keep in mind that you cannot really garden for a particular type of wildlife exclusively. As Marlene Condon explains in Nature-Friendly Garden, “When you grow nectar plants for butterflies and hummingbirds, you will also attract moths, wasps, bees, and many other kinds of insects.” Spiders and caterpillars will feed on them, and they will attract birds. Maybe even deer will join the party. Condon goes on to assert, “You need to accept that all of these creatures are part of your world and include them in your garden planning.” This is our garden’s food web.
We all know the concept of “the big fish eat the little fish.” What do the little fish eat? Algae, plankton, insects. What do insects eat? Start with any food or animal, follow this thread to its source, and eventually you wind up at plants and, ultimately, the sun. Practically all life on Earth depends on the sun’s energy, which is captured by leaves and photosynthesized. An animal eats the plant and absorbs energy, which is transferred to the next animal and so on. This is a food chain.
Every food chain consists of producers, consumers, and decomposers. Plants are the main producers. Consumers are generally categorized as herbivores (plant eaters), carnivores (meat eaters), and omnivores (both plant and animal eaters). Decomposers help break down the nutrients and minerals and recycle them back into the system, which makes the system not such a straight line. There could be many food chains that interrupt or interconnect with each other. The term food web describes the various interweaving parts of food chains.
As with a spider’s web, if one strand is broken, many others remain in place and do the same job. In permaculture, this is referred to as redundancy—the concept that multiple elements provide the same function. Redundancy puts less stress on any single member of the system, which is why more biodiversity, or a variety of life forms, helps increase a system’s stability and resiliency. Lose one? No big deal. Another will fill in until balance is restored. A monoculture, on the other hand, which features a single predominant species, is more vulnerable to disease or predation. For example, many housing subdivisions are planted with one type of street tree. If you lose one, you might lose them all.
In Peter Bane’s Permaculture Handbook, he compares our knowledge of our plant ecosystem with that of our ancestors. “The average Cherokee woman at the time of European contact knew and used approximately 800 species of plants for food, fiber, and medicine.” Most vegetable gardeners today would be doing well to have thirty to fifty species growing, and, in a permaculture garden, that number could be multiplied by ten. Commercial, governmental, and industrial growers are not necessarily concerned about the heritage that they lose by decreasing plant diversity. It is up to the small-scale growers to preserve the native plants and heirloom fruits and vegetables and keep trying new ways to diversify the garden.
Know that Your Garden Matters
Douglas Tallamy, in Bringing Nature Home, explains why every plant decision you make is important. “Because food for all animals starts with the energy harnessed by plants, the plants we grow in our gardens have the critical role of sustaining, directly or indirectly, all of the animals with which we share our living spaces. The degree to which the plants in our gardens succeed in this regard will determine the diversity and numbers of wildlife that can survive in managed landscapes. And because it is we who decide what plants will grow in our gardens, the responsibility for our nation’s biodiversity lies largely with us.”
Bee balm (Monarda spp.) attracts bees, butterflies, and birds with its nectar.
Your property, with the ecosystem services it provides, is your place to make a difference in the world. The United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) defines ecosystem services as “the multitude of benefits that nature provides to society.” The ecosystem comprises all living and nonliving parts of the environment and their interactions that benefit the world. Those essential services and benefits include cleaning the air, purifying water, providing spiritual connections, pollinating, stabilizing and forming soil, and providing recreation. The FAO estimates that all of this collectively adds up, worldwide, to a value of $125 trillion; however, “these assets are not adequately accounted for in political and economic policy, which means there is insufficient investment in their protection and management.”
Tallamy and Darke delve further into the role of the garden in the larger environment in their book The Living Landscape. Ecosystem services that your very own garden can contribute to include:
• supporting human populations
• protecting watersheds
• cooling and cleaning air
• building and stabilizing topsoil
• moderating extreme weather
• sequestering carbon
• protecting biodiversity
• supporting pollinator communities
• connecting viable habitats
May you find inspiration in the good you are doing in your own little corner of the world.
A honeybee on an apple blossom. Honeybees are important to apple pollination.
Worms help gardeners in many ways, among them aerating the soil and producing nutrient-rich castings (waste).
Soil Matters
Originally printed in the April 2015 newsletter for the Lexington, Kentucky, chapter of Wild Ones: Native Plants, Natural Landscapes
Why care about the soil? Because soil is alive! Soil is the most biodiverse part of your garden ecosystem. Millions of organisms can inhabit a spoonful of rich, healthy soil. Every