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Bringing Nature Home: How Native Plants Sustain Wildlife in Our Gardens
 
 
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Bringing Nature Home: How Native Plants Sustain Wildlife in Our Gardens (Hardcover)

by Douglas W. Tallamy (Author)
Key Phrases: eat alien plants, alien ornamentals, bess beetles, North America, United States, New Jersey (more...)
4.8 out of 5 stars See all reviews (31 customer reviews)

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Editorial Reviews

From Booklist
Tallamy takes an obvious observation—wildlife is threatened when suburban development encroaches on once wild lands—and weds it to a novel one: that beneficial insects are being deprived of essential food resources when suburban gardeners exclusively utilize nonnative plant material. Such an imbalance, Tallamy declares, can lead to a weakened food chain that will no longer be able to support birds and other animal life. Once embraced only by members of the counterculture, the idea of gardening with native plants has been landscape design's poor stepchild, thought to involve weeds and other plants too unattractive for pristine suburban enclaves. Not so, says Tallamy, who presents compelling arguments for aesthetically pleasing, ecologically healthy gardening. With nothing less than the future of North American biodiversity at stake, Tallamy imparts an encouraging message: it's not too late to save the ecosystem-sustaining matrix of insects and animals, and the solution is as easy as replacing alien plants with natives. Haggas, Carol

Review
"An informative and engaging account of the ecological interactions between plants and wildlife, this fascinating handbook explains why exotic plants can hinder and confuse native creatures, from birds and bees to larger fauna."  (Ann Lovejoy Seattle Post-Intelligencer )

"The book evolved out of a set of principles. So the message is loud and clear: gardeners could slow the rate of extinction by planting natives in their yards. This simple revelation about the food web—and it is an intricate web, not a chain—is the driving force in Bringing Nature Home." (Anne Raver New York Times )

"We all know where resistance to natives, reliance on pesticides, and the cult of the lawn still reign supreme: suburban America. And suburban America is where Doug Tallamy aims the passionate arguments for natives and their accompanying wildlife."  (Elizabeth Licata Garden Rant )

"This book aims to motivate parents and caregivers who are concerned about childrens' lack of connection to the outdoors."

(USA Today )

"This book not only shows how important native plants are but also how easy they can be to incorporate into a landscape plan." (Marianne Binetti Seattle Post-Intelligencer )

"A fascinating study of the trees, shrubs, and vines that feed the insects, birds, and other animals in the suburban garden." (Anne Raver New York Times )

See all Editorial Reviews

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 288 pages
  • Publisher: Timber Press; illustrated edition edition (November 6, 2007)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0881928542
  • ISBN-13: 978-0881928549
  • Product Dimensions: 9.1 x 6.1 x 1.1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.7 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.8 out of 5 stars See all reviews (31 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.com Sales Rank: #37,978 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)

    Popular in these categories: (What's this?)

    #15 in  Books > Home & Garden > Gardening & Horticulture > Ornamental Plants
    #19 in  Books > Outdoors & Nature > Fauna > Wildlife
    #51 in  Books > Home & Garden > Gardening & Horticulture > Landscape

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Customer Reviews

31 Reviews
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101 of 101 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars This book makes me stop and think, December 9, 2007
By James Golden (Stockton, NJ United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
I heard Douglas Tallamy speak at the Native Plants in the Landscape Conference at Millersville University (PA) last June, and I've been waiting for his book to be published by Timber Press.

I'm a gardener, and I don't want to grow only native plants. But this book makes me stop and think. Douglas Tallamy makes the best case for use of native plants I've read. I recommend it without reservation.

Simply put, the book's message is this. All life on earth, except for some recently discovered, relatively rare forms that take energy from volcanic vents in the ocean floor, depend on energy from the sun that plants convert into food through photosynthesis. Most of that solar energy is made available to higher life forms through insects that eat plants. With the exception of a few direct herbivores such as cows, all other higher forms of life either eat insects (most birds) or eat other animals that eat insects (hawks eating sparrows), and so on up the food chain. The productivity of an environment, literally the weight of biomass produced in a given area, is directly related to the insect population, and the variety of wildlife - number of species of birds and so on - is also directly related to the numbers and varieties of insects living there.

Research now clearly shows that native insect populations cannot be sustained by most alien plants. Our insects have co-evolved with native plants over millions of years, and most have highly specific preferences for certain plants as food. As Professor and Chair of the Department of Entomology and Wildlife Ecology at the University of Delaware, Tallamy has access to research that tells a disturbing story. With increasing urbanization and suburbanization, loss of large forest and natural areas to development, and transformation of a vast portion of the continent into ecologically sterile lawn, we can look forward to mass extinctions of insects, birds, and other forms of life that could surpass the mass extinctions caused by the great meteorite impacts long ago.

Without the literally innumerable varieties of insects that constitute the first step in transfer of solar energy into life, massive losses of species will occur in the not too distant future. Many such extinctions are actually under way.

Tallamy's statistics support his message. Native oaks, for example, support 517 lepidoptera species, willows, 456, birches, 413. In contrast, alien Clematis vitalba supports 40 species of herbivores in its homeland, but only 1 in North America. Another example, Phragmites australis supports 170 species in its homeland, but only 5 species on this continent. Unfortunately, insects can't evolve to adapt to alien species in time to save our threatened populations. Evolution takes place over millions of years. Although the Norway maple has been on the North American continent for going on 300 years, and has become the predominant shade tree here, it still has not become a productive part of our native ecosystem. Instead, it is rapidly displacing native species of maple.

Tallamy urges readers to do what they can to eliminate invasive alien species, to use native plants, to replace sterile lawns, which consist of two or three alien grass species that support little more than Japanese beetle grubs, with sustaining native plant refuges. He urges those who live in suburbia to plant native shade trees, possibly groves, to plant natives along lot lines to begin reestablishing productive areas where insects can successfully reproduce and live, and where their predators can find security and cover.

Tallamy writes with grace and humor. He makes it easy to follow his arguments, uses copious examples to relate his ideas to the natural world we all know, and uses down-to-earth anecdotes to illustrate his points clearly. The book, even with its many, for me, unpronounceable binomial Latin names for a multitude of insects, is an easy read. I finished it in two days, while busy with work and many other chores.

Like most people, I have an aversion to what I consider ugly, even frightening insects. I find it much easier to look at pictures of pretty butterflies than spiders and sawflies, but I learned a lot about the insect world while reading this book and looking at its pictures. And now I have enough knowledge to want to learn more, and to better understand how the natural world of my garden works.

I doubt I'll be able to eliminate plants of foreign origin from my garden, but I'll try to keep a much better balance of natives to aliens (mostly natives), and practice more sustainable gardening in the future. And I'll certainly work to try to convince others to reduce lawn size and incorporate native plants into their landscapes.
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37 of 37 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Love Birds? Invite Them Into Your Yard., November 20, 2007
Douglas Tallamy was captivated early by the natural world. In his engaging new book, Bringing Nature Home, Tallamy writes of spending his summer days exploring the "wild" places near his home in New Jersey. There, he also discovered the devastating effects of development when a bulldozer buried tiny toads he had watched develop from tadpoles in a polliwog pond. Our hearts go out to the nine-year-old child as he works valiantly, but futilely, to save the little creatures from being buried alive.
When he grew up, the boy who had tried to rescue toads studied the natural world, ultimately becoming Professor and Chair of Entomology and Wildlife Ecology at the University of Delaware. In the process, he discovered the extent of loss resulting from wide scale development and agricultural activities. And that is the subject of his book. But Bringing Nature Home is not another gloom and doom tome on what we humans have wrought. Instead, this engaging and highly readable book tells us how we can all be involved in turning back environmental loss in a way that will bring that wild world right into our own back yards by simply trading non-native ornamental plantings for native ones.
Bringing Nature Home is very well documented (with a bibliography longer than your arm) and full of beautiful and fascinating photos. It includes many of Tallamy's own personal landscaping experiences as well as numerous suggestions on plant choices for the rest of us.
Like Ted Williams in Wild Moments and Scott Weidensaul in Return to Wild America, Tallamy remains optimistic about the future of America's wildlife. But unlike Williams and Weidensaul, both of whom wrote eloquently about why we should connect with and want to save our natural world, the good professor's book is a prescription on how we can all work to make that happen.
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22 of 22 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars GARDENING FOR THE 21ST CENTURY, January 11, 2008
By Ian Eagleson (Malvern, PA United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This is a first-rate popular work by a mature researcher. Tallamy's arguments for using native plants in suburban gardens are convincing, often eloquent (esp. in chaps. 3 and 4). He argues that native bugs can only eat plants that they share an evolutionary history with. Our bugs just can't eat plants which have evolved in other parts of the world (i.e. alien plants). Furthermore, our birds don't feed their young on plants but can only feed their young on bugs. (This is true even if adult birds can survive on plant food alone--e.g. berries from native and alien plants alike). So bugs are necessary for bird reproduction. Therefore, as the number and diversity of native plants diminish so do the number and diversity of bugs, and, therefore, so do the number of birds since bugs are less and less available for bird reproduction. So far as reproductive nutrition is concerned, alien plants are as useful as a parking lot. Since so far as making bugs available for food, alien plants have no ecological function. What's worse, there is very little in our native ecosystem to inhibit the spread of many of these alien plants--except us!

Tallamy does not leave us hanging with just a lot of bad news. To the contrary, he offers a plan for beginning recovery in which the suburban gardener plays the central role. He celebrates the role each suburban gardener can have in restoring the habitat of native plant and animal ecosystems right in each gardener's own yard. He gave me a real excitement about creating and observing a wonderous, healthy biodiversity just outside my backdoor, a diversity much more interesting than I could ever achieve with alien plants. His hope is that this excitement could become widespread among gardeners such that suburbia and nature could reconcile.

The few times Tallamy touches upon the issue of how best to achieve this reconciliation so far as policy, he is careful not to call for any government involvement but rather to encourage grassroots action. Now I guess in general we don't want the state telling us what and what not to plant. But if his arguments are sound, some state funded education might be in order. The state has already seen fit to spend money encouraging us to plant trees, this book seems to make a fine argument that the state has an interest in encouraging us to plant certain kinds of trees an not others. Also Tallamy seems more tenative than I would be over policy regarding future importation of aliens.

But in general I think this is a great book. Indeed I've just finished it and I may be still too much in its thrall. But I put it in the rare league of two with Ricke Darke'sThe American Woodland Garden: Capturing the Spirit of the Deciduous Forest. It is a masterful work expressing, like Darke's, what might be called the new Emersonian spirit in American gardening. It really helps us become oriented toward how to cooperate with and be a part of nature in the 21st century. I suppose it goes without saying that I regard it as essential reading for every contemporary suburban gardener.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars Incredibly Eye-Opening
I saw Doug Tallamy speak last fall and it was a fun and very informative lecture. I was a biology major and am an outdoors enthusiast, but the importance of gardening with native... Read more
Published 8 days ago by Pen Name

5.0 out of 5 stars thought provoking
Bringing Nature Home: How You Can Sustain Wildlife with Native Plants, Updated and Expanded A well written book that may change the way you view insects and native plants.
Published 18 days ago by Laura Steiner

1.0 out of 5 stars Mistake
I returned this item. The title gives a wrong impression. This book is about BUGS.
Published 28 days ago by Mary C. Butash

5.0 out of 5 stars An inspiring read
I was so inspired by this book that I bought a copy for my sister, who is soon moving to a 5-acre property. Read more
Published 1 month ago by MEL

5.0 out of 5 stars A book for every gardener
As a Virginia Master Gardener and a Certified Virginia Master Naturalist, I thought that this book makes one of the best cases I have read for planting native plants instead of... Read more
Published 2 months ago by Thomas J. Price

5.0 out of 5 stars Best Native Plant Book
Bringing Nature Home, by Douglas Tallamy, has the numerical data to support the use of native, rather than alien, plants in our gardens. Read more
Published 3 months ago by aiwf

5.0 out of 5 stars Must read for any truly dedicated gardener.
This book was eye-opening. Anyone who cares about gardening and the wider environment should read this book. Read more
Published 5 months ago by T. DiGuiseppe

5.0 out of 5 stars A must read for gardeners
I received this book for my birthday, started to skim it and could not put it down. The book makes the best case for growing native plants in our gardens I have ever read. Read more
Published 6 months ago by Cloe

5.0 out of 5 stars "Bringing Nature Home"
"Bringing Nature Home" is a short course in why we should be planting natives in our gardens. It is direct, practical, profusely illustrated with great photos (especially of... Read more
Published 6 months ago by egreetham

5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent!!!
This is a very important book for everyone to read. Tallamy has been an incrediable influence in Northen Michigan to take action in planting native plants. Read more
Published 7 months ago by Carolyn

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