Friday, November 9, 2012


Elements of BACKYARD WILDLIFE HABITATS:

1. Food
2. Water
3. Cover
4. Places to Raise Young
5. Sustainable Gardening
-- National Wildlife Federation's Backyard Wildlife Habitat Program (read the full text)
* Water * Cover * Open ground * Mulch * Nectar sources * Fruit * Seeds * Annual wildflower seed 
-- Las Pilitas native plant nursery (read thefull text)
Why Organic?


1. Protect Future Generations
2. Build Soil
3. Protect Water Quality
4. Save Energy 
5. Reduce Health Risk
9. Promote Biodiversity
extract from Organic Times, Spring 1992, 
Excerpted from an article by Sylvia Tawse. (read the full text)
… chemicals such as pesticides and herbicides, manufactured for killing, do not stop with the bugs and weeds shown on the box. They kill everything, from butterfly eggs to beneficial nitrogen-fixing bacteria. Please never use these horrible substances in your garden. At best a cruel hoax, they are more likely a devastating curse upon humanity.
--H.C. Flores, Food Not Lawns
(Read more about this book atFoodNotLawns.com)
On organic farms, there are 
109 percent more wild plants
85 percent more plant species 
32 percent more birds
5 percent more bird species
35 percent more bats
than on non-organic farms.
-- study by the British Trust for Ornithology

The wildlife

Butterflies and Insects
Bryant, Peter J, “Butterflies and Their Larval Foodstuffs.” Exceptional website with So. Calif. butterfly photos, larval photos and foodstuff plants, by a U.C.Irvine professor. Few other resources show as many instar stages for the larvae.
Hogue, Charles L., Insects of the Los Angeles Basin (Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County, 1993) A comprehensive volume packed with both color and black & white photos, and descriptive text that tells habits and foraging.
Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County, Butterfly Gardening in Southern California (ISBN 0-938644-35-1) This small pamphlet includes full color photos of the common butterflies and some of their larval stages. Text tells about lifecycles, seasonality, feeding habits, and host plants.
Ryder, Joanne, Where Butterflies Grow(juvenile). Beautifully illustrated picture book, covering many of these adult-level topics.
"Alternative Pollinators: Native Bees" an ATTRA article about attracting native bees, also known as solitary bees or pollen bees.  (ATTRA = National Sustainable Agriculture Information Service)
Squire, Ann O., Spiders of North America(juvenile).  Highly recommended by my 10 y.o. book reviewer.
Birds and other critters
Cornell Lab of Ornithology – join Project FeederWatch , or participate in the tenth annual Great Backyard Bird Count on February 16-19, 2007.
eNature.com – an online “field guide” which can be sorted by zip code.  Presented by the National Wildlife Federation.
Fisher, Chris C. and Herbert Clarke, Birds of Los Angeles (incl. Santa Barbara, Ventura and Orange Counties)
The Humane Society of the United States,Wild Neighbors: The Humane Approach to Living with Wildlife. Gives suggestions for dealing with squirrels, opossums and other animals which can become difficult in dense urban neighborhoods.
Local Birds® of Orange County (many counties available) (Local Birds, Inc., 1996). A simple folding laminated card with illustrations of common backyard, trail, water and shore birds, excellent for quick reference or hiking.
Morrison, Gordon, Nature in the Neighborhood (juvenile). Shows wildlife flourishing amidst an urban setting.
National Audubon Society, First Field Guide to Birds (juvenile). Teaches how to look for birds, and what to look for.  Because it is national, I recommend that it be used in conjunction with a full field guide such as Sibleys or Fisher so that you can actually find your local species.
Sibley, David Allen, The Sibley Field Guide to Birds of Western North America.

The Habitat

National Wildlife Federation’s Backyard Wildlife Habitat Program
Mizejewski, David and the National Wildlife Federation, Attracting Birds, Butterflies and Other Backyard Wildlife. A richly-informative full-color guide to transforming your property.
Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County, Butterfly Gardening in Southern California (ISBN 0-938644-35-1) This small pamphlet includes full color photos of the common butterflies and some of their larval stages. Text tells about lifecycles, seasonality, feeding habits, and host plants.
The Xerces Society and the Smithsonian Institution, Butterfly Gardening: Creating Summer Magic in Your Garden.
Plant Selection
“Our native plants, having evolved here, are ideally suited to perform such ecological services as manufacturing oxygen and filtering impurities from our water. These plants also do the best job of providing food and shelter for native wild animals. Plants are a cornerstone of biological diversity. Biodiversity is vital to humans, because our survival depends on the earth and its life forms” -- California Native Plant Society. (Read the full article)
"Sunset zones do not work very well with native plants. ... The original zones were created to find the areas where fruit and vegetables would succeed. ... Native plants care much more about rainfall, average 10 year winter low temperature, summer humidity and their plant community. Climate is better represented by plant communities, not Sunset Zones. So use your Sunset Western Garden Book to figure out the fruit tree you want, or if you can grow tomatoes, but use our plant community list for native plants." -- LasPilitas.com
Find your plant community by city name or zip code.
"Most of the population of California lives in the Coastal Sage Scrub plant community." - LasPilitas.com 
Read more about the Coastal Sage Scrubplant community.  To open the list of the plants that are in the trade and live in California Coastal Sage Scrub click here.
About Native Plants
Our native plants, having evolved here, are ideally suited to perform such ecological services as manufacturing oxygen and filtering impurities from our water. These plants also do the best job of providing food and shelter for native wild animals. Plants are a cornerstone of biological diversity. Biodiversity is vital to humans, because our survival depends on the earth and its life forms.  --from the California Native Plant Societywebsite
Belzer, Thomas J., Roadside Plants of Southern California (Mountain Press, 1984) Excellent full color photos, a great “field guide” for taking on hikes.
Bornstein, Carol et al, California Native Plants for the Garden.  A welcome new addition to the Calif native plant bookshelf, this book includes color photos and encyclopedic-style notes about a considerable number of Calif native plants which are appropriate for garden cultivation.  Includes some photos of well-designed native plant gardens.
The California Native Plant Society, article “Why Grow Native Plants?” The California Native Plant Society has several local chapters throughout Southern California.
Clarke, Charlotte Bringle, Edible and Useful Plants of California. Did you know that many California natives are edible? Learn which ones, and how to prepare them.
Las Pilitas nursery's online plant catalog is a wealth of information about Calif native plants
McAuley, Milt, Wildflowers of the Santa Monica Mountains.
PRBO Conservation Science, "Enhancing Coastal Scrub and Chaparral Habitat for Birds..." (pdf)
Poyourow, Joanne, “Including Native Plants in Your Garden” article (pdf)
Whitson, Tom, et al, Weeds of the West(Western Society of Weed Science, 9th Edition, 2001) Although it covers multiple states, this book includes grasses. Full color plates.
California Native Plant Sources
What is a native plant?   Plants that grew here (in California) prior to European contact.  They are the foundation of our native ecosystems, or natural communities.  --paraphrased from the California Native Plant Society website
Larner Seeds catalog and website, highly recommended for “Seeds of California Native Plants”
Theodore Payne Foundation, Sun Valley. Browse and buy native plants at this local non-profit foundation.
El Nativo Growers – order native plants online and pick them up in Azusa.
Las Pilitas – mail-order native plant nursery, with nursery sites in Escondido (San Diego county) and Santa Margarita (San Luis Obispo county).
Native Sons nursery is a wholesaler of many Calif. natives.  Click on "find a retailer" to learn where to buy.  Many Armstrong nurseries carry the Native Sons line, but you must know your plant stock, since Native Sons distributes more than simply Calif. natives.
Tree of Life nursery, San Juan Capistrano.
Attracting Specific Critters
If you wish to attract specific critters, you need to provide the habitat and diet they prefer.
Anise Swallowtail butterflyWild fennel** (Foeniculum vulgare), blossoms of the carrot family ... Read more atLas Pilitas and Bryant
Buckeye butterflySnapdragons, Monkey flower* (Mimulus spp), Plantain**  ... Read more atLas Pilitas and Bryant
Monarch butterflyMilkweed** (Asclepias spp)
Checkerspot butterfliesTidy Tips* (Layia platyglossa) ... Available at Larner Seed
Mourning Cloak butterflyElm, willow, birch, poplar, floss silk tree ... Read more at Bryant
Painted Lady, West Coast Lady butterfliesCheeseweed** (Malva parviflora), Lupines* ... Read more at Las Pilitas and Bryant
HummingbirdsSalvia spp, especially red and purple forms of Salvia gregii, Salvia elegans, Salvia leucantha, Salvia ‘Waverly’;Lobelia cardinalis*;Zauschneria* ... For a list of Calif. native plants see Las Pilitas
Hoverflies (a group of essential pollinating insects)Meadowfoam* (Limnanthes douglasii) ... Available atLarner Seed
* a California native plant   
** plant often destroyed as a "weed"
Read about specific nectar and larval food plants in the Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County's pamphlet Butterfly Gardening in Southern California (ISBN 0-938644-35-1).  Also at Peter J Bryant's website“Butterflies and Their Larval Foodstuffs.”
The Las Pilitas website offers a collection ofwildlife articles emphasising California native plants.  The articles include designing the wildlife garden.

SUSTAINABLE GARDENING

Sustainable gardening techniques include:
* Organic Gardening * Chemical-free * Insect Pest Management * Mulch * Compost (natural plant nutrition) * Preserving biodiversity * Functional landscaping (wildlife habitats and edible plants) * Restoring native plants * Xeriscape (drought-tolerant plants) * Removing invasive species * Harvesting rainwater (the path of the future) * Greywater (the path of the future) * Matching plant choices to micro-climate * Reducing lawn areas * Ecosystem management
Backyard Composting (ISBN 0-962978-3-0)
Hart, Rhonda Massingham, Bugs, Slugs and Other Thugs: Controlling Garden Pests Organically  Accurate factual information presented with delightful humor.
Hynes, Erin, Improving the Soil (Rodale's Successful Organic Gardening series). Learn about the backbone element of sustainable gardening: your soil.
Lavies, Bianca , Compost Critters (juvenile). Appreciate the richness of soil life with microscopic photos of the variety of critters (eew!) in a healthy compost pile.
Gardening Organically email group at YahooGroups.  For ongoing support and discussion of organic gardening issues, this 1400+person international community is delightful.
Poyourow, Joanne, "Going Organic" (pdf).   How to begin the organic gardening journey.
Poyourow, Joanne, "Doctorate In organicGardening," (pdf).  A booklist with a twist of humor.  Recommendations for everything from soil, to pest control, to companion planting.  Ideal for newcomers to organic gardening.
Poyourow, Joanne, other gardening articles.

Inspiration

Rancho Santa Ana Botanic Garden, Claremont, CA. View an extensive collection of natives, arranged by plant community.
Santa Barbara Botanic Garden, Santa Barbara, CA.  Not exactly local, but a beautiful display of our California natives.
Lowry, Judith Larner, Gardening with a Wild Heart. Delightfully written tales of transforming a property to a native plants landscape.
Stein, Sara, Noah's Garden and Planting Noah's Garden.  The latter includes both inspiration and how-to's about planting a natural habitat-style garden.
Shapiro, Howard-Yana, Gardening for the Future of the Earth.  Explains how our environmental solutions all come together in the garden.  Covers soil, water, biodiversity and more.
   They sat on the ground, a thick carpet of natural leaf fall beneath them. At eye level the world looked different. The Tidy Tips towered overhead, their bright lemon daisy flowers waving gently in the breeze. A Buckeye butterfly frisked by. The air smelled fresh, of pungent white sage and delicate monardella mint. A hummingbird visited the deep tubular orange and red throats of the native lobelia. 
    “All of these plants are California natives,” Tia said. “We selected them because they are the types that we think would have grown here before there was a city. That way the birds and butterflies and bugs have a place to call home.”
    Tia plucked a handful of mature seed from the Encelia, its fresh flowers the Blackeyed Susan of the canyons. A petite blond girl helped her. “Kaia, we look for seedheads that are dry and brown like this. Then you crumble the seeds into your hand and toss them to distribute.” Nine year old Kaia eagerly imitated. “That way, more of these lovely flowers will grow in this area. Let’s do the same with the fennel. Now, smell your hands.”
    “Licorice!” Kaia grinned. She returned to her mother’s side, still savoring the plant oils on her hands.
Beneath the shelter of the drooping sycamore and malthocarpus it seemed unbelievable that they were sitting in the middle of the sixth largest city in the world.
    “Now, be still; let’s listen to the birds.”
-- from Chapter 8 of Legacy, by Joanne Poyourow
Poyourow, Joanne, Legacy.  Shows the interrelated nature of our environmental and social issues, with functional landscaping as a key solution, particularly within urban and suburban centers.