If youāre a human living on this planet, you should get to know Doug Tallamy, the entomologist and University of Delaware professor whose groundbreaking 2006 book, āBringing Nature Home,ā supercharged the .
Tallamy made a case that our native birds and insects evolved with native plants, so they recognize them as food. The loss of these native plants and habitats to development poses an not just to wildlife, but to us.
Since then, Tallamy co-founded a grassroots movement whose mission is to āurgently inspire everyone to address the by adding native plants and removing invasive ones where we live, work, learn, pray, and play.ā
Tallamy chatted with The Associated Press about his decades-long research, his new book, āHow Can I Help?ā and what heās planning next.
The interview has been edited for length and clarity.
AP: What initially inspired you to focus on native plants and their relationships with insects?
TALLAMY: I am an entomologist, so I always think about insects, but it was when my wife, Cindy, and I moved into our home in Oxford, Pennsylvania. The developer had mowed the land for hay, and when you do that, what comes back is all the from Asia, so we ended up with 10 acres of invasive species. Watching the insects interact with those plants showed very clearly that our with them.
So we put the plants that they require back. Ever since, Iāve been measuring the number of bird species that have bred on our property ā 62 ā and the number of moth species ā 1,337 ā that produce the caterpillars that those birds need to reproduce. And that tells me it works.
About 80% of the plants in our residential landscapes are non-native plants. They donāt have to be invasive to wreck the food web. So that led me in a whole new research direction to find out what is happening to the food web.
We got the numbers that supported the argument that native plants are essential, insects are essential, insects are declining, the .
AP: How has public awareness of native plants and biodiversity evolved since you wrote āBringing Nature Homeā?
TALLAMY: I have been talking about it for 20 years and can measure the public response. I get three or four speaking requests a day. Interest is going through the roof.
My message is that you can be part of the solution instead of contributing to the problem just by how you landscape your property. You can reduce the area that you have in lawn, you can put in and you can watch it come back to your own yard. And .
AP: What are the biggest misconceptions that people have about insect conservation and native plants?
TALLAMY: A common one is that native landscaping is essentially the lack of landscaping and you just stop doing anything. Thatās not true at all. They think all native plant landscapes are wild and messy, but , by any stretch.
Another misconception is that if you use native plants instead of crape myrtle from Asia, itās going to lower your property value. These are the talking points of homeownersā associations. If you donāt have most of your property in lawn, youāre not a good citizen.
AP: How do you respond to people who fear that āwildā look?
We do have lawn as a status symbol. So, I donāt suggest we get rid of lawn. Instead, reduce the amount of area thatās in lawn.
You should use lawn where you walk because itās the best plant to walk on without killing it. Line your sidewalk and your driveway with lawn, and have swaths of grass going through your property where youāre going to walk.
Keep it low and manicured to show you and that youāre intentional and taking care of your yard.
And when you do that, nobody even notices. You donāt get cited. You get cited when you try to put a big meadow in your front yard because nobodyās used to that.
AP: What simple actions can homeowners take to make the biggest impact on their local ecosystem?
TALLAMY: There are two.
First, reduce the lawn. Every property has to support pollinators, every property has to manage the watershed in which it lies and every property has to sequester carbon (plants remove carbon dioxide from the atmosphere). Thatāll help combat . And every property has to support the viable food webs of the animals associated with the property.
Lawn does none of those things.
If you have a lot of lawn, you get a lot of runoff, and youāre polluting your watershed with the fertilizers and the pesticides you put on the lawn. When you have a well-planted property, it keeps the water on site, cleans it, helps it soak into the ground and recharges your water table.
AP: What's the second action?
TALLAMY: Choose plants that are going to support that food web, the ones that will share the most energy with other living things. Thatās the problem with plants from other continents; our insects canāt eat them. So, there are no insects for the birds, and the food web stops.
In 84% of the counties where they occur, oaks are the No. 1 plant for passing along that energy. If youāre going to plant a tree, that is the best plant to choose.
AP: In your new book, āHow can I Help?", you answer 499 questions you're most frequently asked and address the importance of ecological balance. How would you explain that to homeowners who may not be familiar with the science?
TALLAMY: I included chapters like that because we were never taught these things. How can I expect somebody to understand that conservation is important when they donāt know what biodiversity does, when they donāt know how much we depend on it totally? Or what evolution or natural selection is.
So, itās a little primer to basic ecological knowledge that will help you understand how important these issues are.
AP: What upcoming projects are you excited about?
TALLAMY: Well, Iām getting closer to retirement, but I just graduated a masterās student who is looking at how we landscape underneath our trees.
We talk about the in creating the caterpillars that drive the food web. But those caterpillars drop from the tree and they pupate in the ground. And how we landscape under those trees determines whether or not those caterpillars will survive. So, thatās really an important addition to our landscape management tools.
You want uncompacted areas where weāre not walking, which means beds around our trees. If youāre mowing or walking under it, youāre squishing all those caterpillars.
So, we ranked all of the plant genera in North America in terms of their ability to support caterpillars and keep that food web going. We havenāt published it yet, but now weāve got that data for every country in the world.
AP: Anything else youād like to share?
TALLAMY: I always like to convey a sense of responsibility. Itās not just the job of a few ecologists or conservation biologists. Itās everybodyās responsibility because we all need it.
You can do that by voting properly. You can do that by not hindering conservation efforts, or you can actively do it right on your own property. But everybody has a responsibility to do it.
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Jessica Damiano writes weekly gardening columns for the AP and publishes the award-winning Weekly Dirt ¾¢±¬“ó¹Ļletter. You can sign up for weekly gardening tips and advice.
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Jessica Damiano, The Associated Press