Doug Tallamy: How Gardening with Native Plants Helps Wildlife, CA Focus

Renowned ecologist and entomologist Doug Tallamy explains why native plants are critical to sustaining wildlife and how home gardeners can halt extinction and species loss when they choose native plants, particularly caterpillar host plants. Tallamy was the keynote speaker of the 2020 online Bringing Back the Natives Garden Tour, featuring California native plant gardens in the San Francisco East Bay, CA. www.bringingbackthenatives.net

Пікірлер: 12

  • @joerich9636
    @joerich96362 ай бұрын

    Always great hearing someone quoting E.O. Wilson

  • @guloguloguy
    @guloguloguy Жыл бұрын

    THANK YOU, VERY, VERY, MUCH!!! THIS IS VITAL, ECOLOGICAL INFORMATION, TO UNDERSTAND!!! I HAVE ALL OF YOU BOOKS, AND NEVER TIRE OF HEARING YOUR MESSAGE! ("SHARED"!!)

  • @waynetyson3822
    @waynetyson38223 жыл бұрын

    Context is everything!

  • @alimoharrer5801
    @alimoharrer58012 жыл бұрын

    Thank you Doug! We have a yard and at work with the native plants, love to see the Caterpillars feeding the chickadees! Wow! The color of fall is due to sunlight at carotenoids! Ali

  • @waynetyson3822
    @waynetyson38223 жыл бұрын

    The underlying PRINCIPLES driving the presence or absence or frequency of organisms are universal. So Tallamy could come to California and recognize familiar processes. Soils and roots are often ignored, as are the associated microbiomes, but "in that we err, we greatly err." (Beston) Whether it is in the abundant clay soils of the East or the generally more coarse and rocky soils of the West, root requirements, for example, follow the same rules. I started with Kramer's PLANT & SOIL WATER RELATIONSHIPS in the mid '50's, and graduated to Kramer and Boyle's WATER RELATIONS OF PLANTS AND SOILS more "recently." Perhaps there are newer treatments that are "better." As Doug said, "Ecology is not rocket science, it's harder." True, but while we'll never know everything, we can learn essential truths (always provisional), provided we "know what we don't know." (M. Mead) As Josh Billings was fond of saying, "The worst kind of ignorance is not so much not knowing, as it is knowing so much that ain't so!" If we continue to challenge our assumptions, we will learn. If we slavishly follow "best practices" we will tend to stay in the intellectual ruts of convention--a "worst" practice if there every was one. Forging fresh cutting edges is great fun, and anyone can do it! Eschew the drudgery of convention--with which the plant business has long been plagued. As they say in England, TAKE COURAGE!

  • @sherylenchoy4983
    @sherylenchoy4983 Жыл бұрын

    Very informative 😊thanks for sharing!

  • @johnbierma9834
    @johnbierma98342 жыл бұрын

    Very good. Thank you 👍🙏🙏

  • @bringingbackthenativesgard8975

    @bringingbackthenativesgard8975

    2 жыл бұрын

    Hi John - I'm glad you enjoyed this video; there are two more talks by Doug on this channel. I know you will enjoy them, as well. Kathy Kramer

  • @alanbrooke144
    @alanbrooke144 Жыл бұрын

    Watching from New Zealand - great presentation, all the same issues here.

  • @bringingbackthenativesgard8975

    @bringingbackthenativesgard8975

    Жыл бұрын

    Hi Alan, We just spent a wonderful month in NZ in November; my 4th trip there. What a beautiful country it is! Kathy

  • @yenbui9743
    @yenbui974321 күн бұрын

    Where can I find the chart of the native and non native plant value to butterflies and moths?

  • @bringingbackthenativesgard8975

    @bringingbackthenativesgard8975

    20 күн бұрын

    You will find it on the Bringing Back the Natives Garden Tour's website, under the "Doug Tallamy" section. The website is www.BringingBacktheNatives.net. www.bringingbackthenatives.net/wp-content/uploads/2022/11/Bar-chart-Tallamy-natves-vs-nonnatives.pdf