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The Spark: Bringing Biodiversity To Your Own Backyard

The Spark: Bringing Biodiversity To Your Own Backyard

Welcome back to The Spark, our monthly newsletter that’s all about how people just like you are creating positive change, one meaningful step at a time.

🐦 Simple tips for restoring biodiversity to the land around your home

🌱 How to start a seed library

🪸 Help monitor coral reef health without ever putting on a swimsuit

“Nature is not optional”: How to restore your yard’s biodiversity

When Doug Tallamy bought his 10-acre property in southeastern Pennsylvania in 2000, the former hayfield was covered in invasive plant species. “I’m an entomologist, so I always look for insects, and right away I saw that the insects are not eating these plants,” he recalls. After tackling the non-native species and introducing native plants — though most of them were planted by the animals themselves — the land is now a thriving forest ecosystem. Some 62 species of birds come to the area to breed, and Tallamy has documented 1,360 species of moths to date. “It wasn’t that hard,” says Tallamy, a professor at the department of Entomology and Wildlife Ecology at the University of Delaware. “Nature is resilient. If I can do it, other people can as well.”

The Spark: Bringing Biodiversity To Your Own Backyard
It takes 6,000 to 9,000 caterpillars to raise one clutch of chickadees to maturity. Credit: Doug Tallamy

The experience inspired him to co-found Homegrown National Park, a grassroots conservation initiative helping people regenerate biodiversity on their land by removing invasive plants and adding native ones. Ninety percent of the insects that eat plants can only eat those they co-evolved with, explains Tallamy. “So when you load the environment with a non-native plant it’s essentially removed from the food web.”

Few non-native plants are as beloved by Americans as turf grass — lawns cover 40 million acres of land in the U.S., equivalent to the size of Colorado. In addition to using up to nine billion gallons of water daily, they provide next to no value to local biodiversity. But anyone can reintroduce key ecosystem functions to their back yard or front lawn, says Tallamy — and it doesn’t have to be all-or-nothing. “Any way that you can reduce the area of your lawn is a valuable contribution.”

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There are many non-toxic ways to remove turf grass, like solarization using plastic sheets or sheet mulching with cardboard. But despite the rising trend of “meadowscaping,” turning an entire lawn into a meadow is one of the hardest ways to go about restoring biodiversity, says Tallamy. “Starting from seed is very hard unless you have a really blank slate.” In the early days of any restoration project, identifying and removing invasive species is key, so they don’t take valuable resources away from native plants.

Those looking to start small can remove parts of their lawn and create islands of native keystone species, balancing a more manicured look with wildlife-friendly areas. This can also pacify unsupportive neighbors or homeowners’ associations, says Tallamy. “Most people don’t know a native plant from a non-native one, but they do know sloppy from neat,” Putting up a sign to explain what you’re doing can also be a good conversation starter.

Another effective solution is planting a tree — ideally an oak, depending on location — and creating a pupation site by replacing the lawn underneath with native plants. This does wonders for caterpillars and the birds that depend on them, explains Tallamy, pointing out that it takes 6,000 to 9,000 caterpillars to raise one clutch of chickadees to maturity.

The Spark: Bringing Biodiversity To Your Own Backyard
A zebra swallowtail. Credit: Doug Tallamy

To find the right native keystone plants for these projects, Homegrown National Park provides a number of resources for identifying the right ecoregion and its keystone plants, and connecting with local experts in native planting. Alternatively, connecting with your local extension office is a good first step.

“In the past, horticulturists and landscape architects have not thought about what plants do at all. They’ve only thought about what they look like,” says Tallamy. But we can create beautiful landscapes that still retain their ecological functions, he says: “It’s a new challenge — it ought to be fun!”

Click here for 10 ways to easily increase the biodiversity on your land.

Borrow, grow, return: How one woman started a seed library movement

When science teacher Rebecca Newburn decided to start a seed library in her hometown of Richmond, Virginia, she had no experience with the work. After connecting with Seed Savers Exchange and BASIL, the oldest seed lending library in the U.S., she launched the Richmond Grows Seed Lending Library in 2010, making it the seventh such library in the U.S.

The Spark: Bringing Biodiversity To Your Own Backyard
Seed libraries typically collect locally adapted or heirloom species. Credit: Mike Licht / Flickr

Fifteen years later, thanks in no small part to the replicable model pioneered by Newburn, and shared along with detailed resources by the associated Seed Library Network, there are now over 2,600 community-led seed libraries operating in the U.S., where people can “borrow” seeds for their own use and “return” them from their own crop in the next growing cycle. This way, the library can “evolve” along with the local plants and maintain a broader genetic diversity than seeds sold commercially. This, combined with giving gardeners free access to seeds, helps support both plant biodiversity and the wildlife that depends on it for survival.

While most are based at public libraries, many are also hosted by farms, community centers, universities and even at private homes. They tend to focus on maintaining a catalogue of locally adapted or heirloom species, combining biodiversity efforts with community education and outreach.

Click here to learn how to start your own seed library, or find an existing seed library near you.

Citizen scientists are diving into marine conservation

Coral reefs are the most biologically diverse ecosystem on the planet, hosting a quarter of all marine life despite covering only one percent of the ocean floor. Around the world, citizen scientists are supporting local research and conservation projects by monitoring local reefs and their inhabitants while diving, snorkeling or evaluating data online.

Reef Check trains recreational divers around the world to collect standardized scientific data on the health of tropical coral reefs and temperate kelp forests, while Coral Watch, based at the University of Queensland in Australia, developed a freely available Coral Health Chart that lets anyone monitor coral health without prior training and contribute their findings to a global database.

The Spark: Bringing Biodiversity To Your Own Backyard The Spark: Bringing Biodiversity To Your Own Backyard

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In the U.S., the Rescue a Reef program at the University of Miami hosts field expeditions for scuba-certified volunteers who can help scientists restore local coral populations. Those who want to help protect the Great Barrier Reef don’t need to go to Australia or even put on a swimsuit: through Virtual Reef Diver, anyone can help scientists monitor the reef by classifying underwater images from the comfort of their own home.

Click here to see more citizen science marine conservation projects active in the U.S.

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