The Living Landscape Quotes
The Living Landscape: Designing for Beauty and Biodiversity in the Home Garden
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Rick Darke703 ratings, 4.33 average rating, 79 reviews
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The Living Landscape Quotes
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“native: a plant or animal that has evolved in a given place over a period of time sufficient to develop complex and essential relationships with the physical environment and other organisms in a given ecological community.”
― The Living Landscape: Designing for Beauty and Biodiversity in the Home Garden
― The Living Landscape: Designing for Beauty and Biodiversity in the Home Garden
“Ecosystems function locally, not globally. Local extinction, the disappearance of a species within, say, the woodlot down the street, or even your front yard, is now predicted to compromise the productivity of that woodlot and your yard.”
― The Living Landscape: Designing for Beauty and Biodiversity in the Home Garden
― The Living Landscape: Designing for Beauty and Biodiversity in the Home Garden
“One small 15 by 15 foot garden in a courtyard in the center of Dover, Delaware, produced 150 monarch adults in a single season by including several Asclepias syriaca plants as one of its species.”
― The Living Landscape: Designing for Beauty and Biodiversity in the Home Garden
― The Living Landscape: Designing for Beauty and Biodiversity in the Home Garden
“Trees help reduce storm water runoff by intercepting falling rain and holding a portion of it on the leaves and bark. A mature tree can hold 100 gallons of water on its many surfaces during a rainstorm. Part of this water soon evaporates and the rest is gradually released into the soil below.”
― The Living Landscape: Designing for Beauty and Biodiversity in the Home Garden
― The Living Landscape: Designing for Beauty and Biodiversity in the Home Garden
“We must not forget that humans also have relationships with the landscapes around them. Fully functional residential landscapes must meet the physical, cultural, and aesthetic needs of humans while generating ecosystem services required by diverse other species. We may use ferns even though they contribute little to local food webs because they provide cover for wildlife, are beautiful, are durable ground covers, help replenish atmospheric oxygen, aid in hydrologic recharge, and can be the vegetational backbone of soil ecosystems. We may use splashes of colorful plants even if they are not indigenous to our region because they are beautiful and they will draw us into our gardens to experience the life around us. And we will not skimp on the core group of plants that support most of the biodiversity vital to ecosystem function.”
― The Living Landscape: Designing for Beauty and Biodiversity in the Home Garden
― The Living Landscape: Designing for Beauty and Biodiversity in the Home Garden
“To paraphrase Abe Lincoln, you can create multifunctional residential landscapes using all-natives some of the time, and some natives all of the time, but you cannot meet all landscaping goals using all natives all of time.”
― The Living Landscape: Designing for Beauty and Biodiversity in the Home Garden
― The Living Landscape: Designing for Beauty and Biodiversity in the Home Garden
“Today ginkgoes are contributing little if anything to local food webs compared to most contemporary indigenous plants. Regardless of whether it was once a native in North America, the complex food webs ginkgo may have supported in the past did not survive its seven-million-year hiatus. An ecosystem is the combination of an interacting community of living organisms and their physical environment, functioning as an ecological unit in a given place. The operative word in this definition is “interacting”
― The Living Landscape: Designing for Beauty and Biodiversity in the Home Garden
― The Living Landscape: Designing for Beauty and Biodiversity in the Home Garden
“A century after its introduction, Eucalyptus stelloleta, a tree planted worldwide for lumber and ornamental purposes, supports only one species in California but 48 species of insects in its Australian homeland according to D. Strong and colleagues.”
― The Living Landscape: Designing for Beauty and Biodiversity in the Home Garden
― The Living Landscape: Designing for Beauty and Biodiversity in the Home Garden
“Few people realize that the dry Mediterranean region, including the original breadbasket of civilization in what is now Iraq, was once a forested ecosystem. When humans cut those forests thousands of years ago, rainfall became even more scarce than it already was and the entire region became and has remained an extremely fragile and far-less-productive desert-scrub ecosystem.”
― The Living Landscape: Designing for Beauty and Biodiversity in the Home Garden
― The Living Landscape: Designing for Beauty and Biodiversity in the Home Garden
“Contrary to popular belief, trees rarely have taproots beyond the seedling stage. The root systems of most deciduous trees extend out from the trunk at least as far as the canopy branches, yet they rarely grow deeper than 2 or 3 feet into the ground. This is partly because roots require oxygen, which is increasingly scarce in the lower soil horizons.”
― The Living Landscape: Designing for Beauty and Biodiversity in the Home Garden
― The Living Landscape: Designing for Beauty and Biodiversity in the Home Garden
“Likewise, a home garden can be designed to serve a variety of environmental functions: • recharge groundwater • replenish atmospheric oxygen • sequester carbon • furnish shelter/cover for wildlife • promote a stable food web for wildlife • support pollinator communities • provide the right conditions for natural hybridization and the continuing development of biodiversity”
― The Living Landscape: Designing for Beauty and Biodiversity in the Home Garden
― The Living Landscape: Designing for Beauty and Biodiversity in the Home Garden
“However, popular culture defines Nature as an “other,” a near-sentient force operating beyond the bounds of human community. I was raised with that notion and can empathize with the nostalgia often accompanying it, but I can’t accept the idea of a separate Nature any more than I believe digital data resides in “The Cloud” (the data resides in machinery that is typically plugged into a wall socket).”
― The Living Landscape: Designing for Beauty and Biodiversity in the Home Garden
― The Living Landscape: Designing for Beauty and Biodiversity in the Home Garden
“One of the most important functionalities is durability: the capacity to thrive over a long time without dependence on resource-consuming maintenance regimes.”
― The Living Landscape: Designing for Beauty and Biodiversity in the Home Garden
― The Living Landscape: Designing for Beauty and Biodiversity in the Home Garden
“In most cases and most places, the design of broadly functional, ecologically sound, resource-conserving residential gardens requires a carefully balanced mix of native and non-native plants. It’s time to stop worrying about where plants come from and instead focus on how they function in today’s ecology. After all, it’s the only one we have.”
― The Living Landscape: Designing for Beauty and Biodiversity in the Home Garden
― The Living Landscape: Designing for Beauty and Biodiversity in the Home Garden
“On average, native plants support thirteen times more caterpillar species than non-native plants.”
― The Living Landscape: Designing for Beauty and Biodiversity in the Home Garden
― The Living Landscape: Designing for Beauty and Biodiversity in the Home Garden
“If our landscaping choices can rebuild populations of a butterfly thought to be extinct without listing it under the Endangered Species Act and without investing one dime of limited conservation funds—that is, without even trying—imagine what we can do if we include conservation as one of the goals of our gardens.”
― The Living Landscape: Designing for Beauty and Biodiversity in the Home Garden
― The Living Landscape: Designing for Beauty and Biodiversity in the Home Garden
