Sunday, March 30, 2025

Impactful Shrubs

 

What’s in your yard? You probably don’t have room for everything you want, but small and urban yards can plan to maximize the wildlife value of their plantings. We talk about trees a lot, but shrubs can provide good ecological value for smaller spaces. Here are some thoughts on impactful shrubs to plant that make a difference.

Impactful means that they contribute to the food web in one of 3 ways: their fruit is good for wildlife (like birds), their foliage serves as a host plant to insect herbivores (like caterpillars), and/or they are a good source of pollen/nectar for insects (like bees and butterflies).



Blueberry specialist bee helps us get the most fruit

Shrubs that support frugivorous birds (those who use fruit as a major source of their adult nutrition) include native viburnums (Viburnum spp.), hearts a bustin’ (Euonymus americanus), spicebush (Lindera spp.), elderberry (Sambucus canadensis), holly shrubs (Ilex spp.), chokeberry (Aronia spp.), shrub dogwoods (Swida amomum, C. foemina and others), St. John’s wort (Hypericum spp.), beautyberry (Callicarpa americana), blueberry (Vaccinium spp.), huckleberry (Gaylussacia spp.), and sumac (Rhus spp.).

Shrubs whose foliage serves as a host plant to butterflies and moths (these feed caterpillars) include spicebush (Lindera spp.), blueberry (Vaccinium spp.), plums (Prunus spp.), and paw paw (Asimina spp.). Some of these support specialist insects like the Zebra swallowtail that can only use paw paw.



Zebra swallowtail as caterpillar and adult

Shrubs whose flowers are a good source of pollen or nectar for bees and butterflies include native viburnums (Viburnum spp.), buckeyes (Aesculus spp.), elderberry (Sambucus canadensis), holly shrubs (Ilex spp.), chokeberry (Aronia spp.), shrub dogwoods (Swida amomum, C. foemina and others), St. John’s wort (Hypericum spp.), blueberry (Vaccinium spp.), huckleberry (Gaylussacia spp.), buttonbush (Cephalanthus occidentalis), and sumac (Rhus spp.).

Buckeyes are good for bees and hummingbirds

You can see that some plants might serve 2-3 ecological purposes (for example, blueberry and spicebush support both birds and insects), allowing smaller yards to benefit from these shrubs quite a bit. Make your choices count!

Previous blogs on shrubs that you might find useful:

Native Shrubs in the Georgia Piedmont

Native Shrubs for Supporting Birds

Underused Native Shrubs


Sunday, March 23, 2025

Enjoy Each Season: Spring

We've been waiting for spring for literally months; now that it's finally here, I have to remind myself to appreciate each plant in its turn. For all their benefit to the ecosystem, spring native plants aren't always as showy or large as the exotics that are so widely planted.

I am enjoying the Sweet Betsy trillium (Trillium cuneatum) just starting to bloom in my yard. We recently rescued some of this petite perennial from a construction project; so many of these small, ephemeral things get overlooked and yet I imagine a time when they might have carpeted the woodlands around here.

Trillium cuneatum

This week I had a chance to stop by Stone Mountain. I was interested to see what spring granite outcrop plants might be blooming. The woolly groundsel (Packera dubia) was just getting started but the elf-orpine (Diamorpha smallii) was not yet flowering. You can see photos of flowering elf-orpine at my Heggie's Rock post from 2013. One young serviceberry (Amelanchier arborea) was flowering like mad, ahead of  all others I've seen. 

Amelanchier arborea

Diamorpha smallii - not quite ready


Packera dubia

On the way back home, I enjoyed the many flowering redbuds that lined the edges of wild roads. By next week, many of them will be done. I was glad I got out to see them at their best. Don't rush through spring - take time to notice the diversity of our native flora during their season.

Redbud (Cercis canadensis)




Sunday, March 16, 2025

Surely It’s Spring Compilation

It’s spring – or is it? These longer, warmer days in Georgia have us all seeing a few blooms and anticipating what’s next as we await the official arrival on Thursday the 20th.


Flowers above (not yet blooming!) are clockwise from upper left: beardtongue (Penstemon), Eastern columbine (Aquilegia canadensis), mouse-eared coreopsis (Coreopsis auriculata), foamflower (Tiarella), pink phlox (Phlox subulata), red buckeye (Aesculus pavia), and Piedmont azalea (Rhododendron canescens).

When it comes to native flowers, what can we expect? And what should we consider when we realize our spring doesn’t have enough native flowers? You can imagine that over the last several years, I’ve written about spring flowers a time or two.

Here is a list of spring topics you might want to read. I hope that you find something inspirational for this season.

Plant specific posts:

Sunday, March 9, 2025

March 2025 Moment in Nature


Sometimes our #momentinnature moments are fleeting, but this week I got to enjoy one that lasted a long time: miles and miles of time.

We drove down to Florida and the roadside trees in all 3 states were beautifully festooned with yellow flowers. These were the flowers of Carolina jessamine vines (Gelsemium sempervirens) that twined among the bare twigs of the trees on the sunny edge. 

Some had just a few flowers while others created large masses of yellow.  I could not help but smile to see so many.




Unfortunately we were not able to stop and take a picture (below is a photo from 2014 and it really does not do it justice). However, we stopped at Buc-ee's in Auburn, AL and found them using this same plant as a shrub (or at least a very bushy groundcover) See the photo above.  


Roadside Carolina jessamine


Sunday, March 2, 2025

The Hidden Life of Trees (the book)

 

I’m always looking for creative ways to reach people about the importance of plants and my husband recently found a book that I think could be a great resource for young folks and people that are more receptive to graphic depictions of information. The Hidden Life of Trees was originally published in German in 2015 by Peter Wohlleben. Later, an illustrated version was published with numerous photos but still lots of text. In 2023, the version that I’m reviewing was published: The Hidden Life of Trees: A Graphic Adaptation.



The book starts with some good explanations of physical processes to set the stage: how do trees breathe, nutrient uptake, pollination, even how new trees grow and the challenges that seedlings have to reach maturity. Also included in the beginning are the role that trees play in their ecosystem: the creatures that trees support over time from leaves, to bark, to nest cavities, and even the support they play in death.

Chapters are titled Spring, Summer, Fall, and Winter and the beautiful illustrations follow that progression. A final Section, The Return to Spring, is a bit of a post-2015 exploration of the impact of his first book and musings on the impact of climate change and the human impacts on global forests. The book is a love letter to trees while imparting information about how important they are and helping us to understand how special they are to our world. I downloaded the following page graphics from the publisher’s website:

 


I hope that this creative approach will reach more people through its innovative approach. By the way, other books have also been created using parts of the original to help communicate Peter’s message. You can find them here.