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Gardening for Wildlife - Fact Sheet

A healthy environment is a collection of healthy parts. By welcoming a variety of plants and beneficial life forms (helping insects, butterflies, earthworms, toads, songbirds) into your yard, you help to create a natural balance which can better resist damage by disease and infestation. At the same time, you’ll find a fascinating and ever-changing story taking place in your garden.

Clouded Sulphur on Alium

While all wildlife species have individual preferences, they also have some common needs – food, water, shelter and space. These should always be considered in designing for wildlife. Providing food may be a mixed blessing if you don’t also provide hiding places from predators. Many cute, furry or feathered friends depend on a wide variety of other types of life for their survival. For example, many birds depend on insects for food for their nestlings, and seeds can be an important part of their diet. With songbird numbers declining, everything we can do to assist these beautiful visitors is a bonus.

Some butterflies are dependent on wild plants we banish from our yards such as wild carrot and milkweed. The beautiful American goldfinch loves thistle seeds and lines its nest with thistledown. Try to stretch your tolerance for other kinds of life that share our ecosystem. We’re all in this together!


Where To Begin
A good place to start in building a home for wildlife is to draw a simple map of your yard. Clearly mark the boundaries and any dominant features such as buildings, driveways, trees and power lines. Now fill in the smaller details such as shrubs, flowerbeds, vegetable gardens and lawns. Finally, be sure to note the orientation (where is south?). Use your map to answer some of the following questions:


Height
• Do you have a good assortment of plant heights including tall trees, smaller trees, shrubs and low bushes, tall herbs (non-woody plants) and low groundcovers?


SpeciesGarden Toad and Toad House
• Do you have a mixture of conifers and hardwoods? Is there a variety of each?

• Do you have groundcovers other than grass?

• Do you have a good selection of native plants in your yard?

• Do any of the plants in your yard produce food for wildlife?


Groupings
• Are the plants in your yard grouped in clumps rather than arranged singly?


Water
• Is there a dependable source of water nearby (pond, stream, river)?


Chemicals
• Do you avoid applying chemicals in your yard? Many chemicals, even organic ones, are toxic to some types of wildlife.

Soil
• Do you keep bare soil covered with a mulch?

• Do you use organic material (such as compost, chopped leaves or peat moss) in your yard? Important soil micro-organisms need this humus to survive. Healthy soil helps to feed all other life.

Next, consider all of the questions to which you answered “no.” Can you change any of these features in your yard? Use your map to sketch in possible locations for elements that are currently missing. Consider the amount of shade the area will receive from buildings or other plants.

Plants
Here are a few of the plants that are appreciated by wildlife. Some are native, and some may be easier to find. Eastern Red Cedar (actually a juniper), e.g., is a tree that is found more readily to the south of our zone, but it does survive here, is considered to be a native species, and is much enjoyed by wildlife for shelter and food. However, you will find choices in the list that also are readily available.
Large Trees:
Evergreen
White Pine
Balsam Fir*
Red Pine
White Spruce
White Cedar
Eastern Hemlock*
Eastern Red Cedar
Mourning Dove on Nest
Deciduous
Bur Oak
Bitternut Hickory
Red Oak
Black Cherry
Sugar Maple*
Poplar
Silver Maple
Butternut
Red Maple
Beech*
White Birch
White Ash*
Small Trees:
Evergreen
Eastern Red Cedar
Witch Hazel
Deciduous
Mountain Ash
Pin Cherry*
Serviceberry*
Choke Cherry*
Crabapple
Staghorn Sumac*
Hawthorn
Nannyberry*
Willow
Shrubs:
Evergreen
American Yew*
Common Juniper
  Deciduous
Dogwood
Elderberry*
Black Raspberry*
Smooth Rose
Red Raspberry
Swamp Rose
Potentilla (Shrubby Cinquefoil)
Weigela
Highbush Cranberry
WitchHazel
Vines and Groundcovers:
Bittersweet
Wild Grape
Virginia Creeper*
Bunchberry*
Bearberry
Virgin’s Bower*
Birdhouse- and bird!


While trees and shrubs are getting started, consider using fast growing herbaceous plants to provide food and summer shelter. These are all beautiful and appreciated by a variety of wildlife, and most can be grown outdoors from seed.

Annuals
Ageratum
Nicotiana
Aster
Salvia
Bachelor’s Buttons
Sunflower
Borage
Verbena
Cosmos
Zinnia
Heliotrope



* shade tolerant
Perennials
Bergamot
Daisy
Black-Eyed Susan
Grey-Headed Coneflower
Blazing Star
Hollyhock
Butterfly Bush
Milkweed
Columbine*
Phlox*
Coral Bells*
Purple Coneflower
Coreopsis


Bee on FlowerBe patient. Don’t try to turn your yard into a Garden of Eden overnight. All good things take time, so take heart and have patience. Once you are satisfied with your basic design, aim to complete a piece of it each year. You may come up with great new ideas as you go along. Nature will be glad to help if you give her some elbow room. Have fun and enjoy your yard. Don’t be surprised to find that many others are enjoying it too!



Reprinted and adapted with permission of Peterborough Green Up Association

See also: First Steps to a Natural Garden and Beneficial Insects

Look for additional information on wildlife gardening at the Stratford Public Library!
19 St. Andrew Street   (519-271-0220)   (Click for Website)

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