DIGGING IT
grow larval food plants, also known as “host plants.” Each caterpillars can grow on: from milkweed for monarch but- - erpillars as the ultimate picky eaters; generations of a chem- ical arms race means that if the right plants aren’t there, the lifecycle, the pollinator habitat garden becomes something more – a functional and engaging landscape that can support diverse living things. Many of us, especially those of us who live in urban ar-
eas, work with novel ecosystems, combinations of plants and animals and conditions that have never coexisted before in nature. If we try to see our landscapes through the eyes of pollinators and imagine how they use their habitats at differ- ent stages and season, we can better provide the resources
Leaving perennials up during the winter months provides shelter for pollinators, who may be nesting in the stalks.
to provide shelter for varied pollinators.
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© Amy Yarger
© Amy Yarger
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