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Bringing Nature Home: How You Can Sustain Wildlife with Native Plants, Updated and Expanded Tapa blanda – Ilustrado, 1 Abril 2009
Opciones de compra y productos Add-on
As development and habitat destruction accelerate, there are increasing pressures on wildlife populations. In his groundbreaking book Bringing Nature Home, Douglas W. Tallamy reveals the unbreakable link between native plant species and native wildlife—native insects cannot, or will not, eat alien plants. When native plants disappear, the insects disappear, impoverishing the food source for birds and other animals. Luckily, there is an important and simple step we can all take to help reverse this alarming trend: everyone with access to a patch of earth can make a significant contribution toward sustaining biodiversity by simply choosing native plants. By acting on Douglas Tallamy's practical and achievable recommendations, we can all make a difference.
- Número de páginas360 páginas
- IdiomaInglés
- EditorialTimber Press
- Fecha de publicación1 Abril 2009
- Dimensiones6 x 0.81 x 9 pulgadas
- ISBN-100881929921
- ISBN-13978-0881929928
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Más información del producto
Bringing Nature Home
A blueprint for halting the extinction crisis by using every backyard in America.
Answers to Tough Questions
Why can’t we let nature take its course and just leave the alien plants alone?
Through eons of evolution by natural selection, living things adapted to their physical environment and the organisms around them in ways that enabled them to survive. These natural processes worked well within the ancestral setting that created them, but we humans have changed that setting drastically.
The plants and animals in today’s world have had no time to adapt to these sudden changes and so are still operating under the rules that worked before humans took over landscape management. The end result is that without direct intervention by the humans who have placed them at risk, most organisms will not survive under our rules.
Isn’t habitat destruction a more pressing problem than alien plants in the landscape?
Habitat destruction is a huge problem everywhere. That is precisely why we can no longer rely on natural areas alone to provide food and shelter for biodiversity. Instead, we must restore native plants to the areas that we have taken for our own use so that other species can live along with us in these spaces.
We can start by restoring native plants to our gardens. This is a manageable task for both suburban and city dwellers, with tangible results in a few short seasons as individual gardens begin to attract the birds and the insects that will sustain them.
My house sits on an eighth of an acre. Is that enough land to make a difference if I use natives instead of aliens?
Your small plot is connected to other plots, which are connected to others and others and others. Collectively they are North America. Changing the plant base of all of suburbia is quite an undertaking, but all you have to worry about is your eighth of an acre.
The important thing to remember is that even if you seem like the only one in all of North America who uses more natives than alien plants, wildlife will be better off for your efforts. The effects will be cumulative, and probably synergistic, as more and more people join you.
Why is biodiversity important?
Around 50,000 alien species of plants and animals have colonized North America. It is crucial to keep noncontributing alien species from displacing the native plants and animals that play a critical role in the ecosystem. This is best done by maintaining a full diversity of native organisms in an ecosystem. A diverse ecosystem has more niches filled by competing organisms and is able to more successfully resist invasion by alien species.
Why are native plants important?
Nearly every creature on the planet owes its existence to plants, the only organisms capable of capturing the sun’s energy and turning that energy into food for the rest of us. Because animals directly and indirectly depend on plants for their food, the diversity of animals is closely linked to the diversity of plants. When there are many species of plants, there are many species of animals.
Author Doug Tallamy
Professor of Entomology and Wildlife Ecology at the University of Delaware, Doug Tallamy has taught insect-related courses for 40 years. Among his awards are the Garden Club of America Margaret Douglas Medal for Conservation and the Tom Dodd, Jr. Award of Excellence, the AHS B. Y. Morrison Communication Award, and the Cynthia Westcott Scientific Writing Award. Doug is co-founder with Michelle Alfandari of HOMEGROWN NATIONAL PARK. Learn more at HNPARK.org.
Nature's Best Hope
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Nature's Best Hope (Young Readers' Edition
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The Nature of Oaks
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The Living Landscape
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| Opiniones de los clientes |
4.8 de 5 estrellas 1,391
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4.6 de 5 estrellas 114
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4.8 de 5 estrellas 1,002
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4.7 de 5 estrellas 469
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| Precio | US$13.99US$13.99 | US$7.59US$7.59 | US$15.79US$15.79 | US$23.21US$23.21 |
| More Doug Tallamy books from Timber Press | How you can sustain wildlife with native plants | How you can save the world in your own yard | The rich ecology of our most essential native trees | Designing for beauty and biodiversity in the home garden hardcover |
Opiniones editoriales
Críticas
“Provides the rationale behind the use of native plants, a concept that has rapidly been gaining momentum. . . . The text makes a case for native plants and animals in a compelling and complete fashion.” —The Washington Post
“This is the ‘it’ book in certain gardening circles. It’s really struck a nerve.” —Philadelphia Inquirer
“Reading this book will give you a new appreciation of the natural world—and how much wild creatures need gardens that mimic the disappearing wild.” —The Minneapolis Star Tribune
“A compelling argument for the use of native plants in gardens and landscapes.” —Landscape Architecture
“An essential guide for anyone interested in increasing biodiversity in the garden.” —American Gardener
“I want to mention how excited I am about reading Bringing Nature Home. . . . I like the writing—enthusiastic and down-to-earth, as it should be.” —Garden Rant
“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.” —Seattle Post-Intelligencer
“Tallamy explains eloquently how native plant species depend on native wildlife.” —San Luis Obispo Tribune
“Will persuade all of us to take a look at what is in our own yards with an eye to how we, too, can make a difference. It has already changed me.” —Traverse City Record-Eagle
“Delivers an important message for all gardeners: Choosing native plants fortifies birds and other wildlife and protects them from extinction.” —WildBird Magazine
“There’s an increasing interest among homeowners and others to include more native species in their landscape, thanks to books like Bringing Nature Home, by Doug Tallamy, which extol the virtues of native plants over exotic ornamentals for attracting and sustaining beneficial insects.” —Andover Townsman
“Doug Tallamy weaves an interesting story of how exotic invasive plants affect birds and other components of a healthy forests. It’s a compelling and important story to understand.” —The Bradford Era
Contraportada
As Doug Tallamy eloquently explains, everyone can welcome more wildlife into their yards just by planting even a few native plants. With fascinating explanations and extensive lists of native plants for regional habitats, this scientifically researched book can help us all to make a difference. No prior training is needed to become a backyard ecologist—but Tallamy's book can be a vital first set. For more information, please visit www.plantnative.com.
Biografía del autor
Doug Tallamy is a professor in the Department of Entomology and Wildlife Ecology at the University of Delaware, where he has authored 107 research publications and has taught insect-related courses for 44 years. Chief among his research goals is to better understand the many ways insects interact with plants and how such interactions determine the diversity of animal communities. Among his awards are the Garden Club of America Margaret Douglas Medal for Conservation and the Tom Dodd, Jr. Award of Excellence, the 2018 AHS B. Y. Morrison Communication Award, and the 2019 Cynthia Westcott Scientific Writing Award. Doug is author of Bringing Nature Home, Nature’s Best Hope, and The Nature of Oaks; and co-founder with Michelle Alfandari of HOMEGROWN NATIONAL PARK®. Learn more at HNPARK.org.
Rick Darke is a landscape design consultant, author, lecturer, and photographer based in Pennsylvania who blends art, ecology, and cultural geography in the creation and conservation of livable landscapes. His projects include scenic byways, public gardens, corporate and collegiate campuses, mixed-use conservation developments, and residential gardens. Darke served on the staff of Longwood Gardens for twenty years and received the Scientific Award of the American Horticultural Society. His work has been featured in the New York Times and on National Public Radio. Darke is recognized as one of the world's experts on grasses and their use in public and private landscapes. For further information visit www.rickdarke.com.
Extracto. © Reimpreso con autorización. Reservados todos los derechos.
Gardeners enjoy their hobby for many reasons: a love of plants and nature, the satisfaction that comes from beautifying home and community, the pleasures of creative effort, the desire to collect rare or unusual species, and the healthful benefits of exercise and outdoor air. For some people, like my wife and me, there is pleasure in just watching plants grow.
But now, for the first time in its history, gardening has taken on a role that transcends the needs of the gardener. Like it or not, gardeners have become important players in the management of our nation’s wildlife. It is now within the power of individual gardeners to do something that we all dream of doing: to make a difference. In this case, the “difference” will be to the future of biodiversity, to the native plants and animals of North America and the ecosystems that sustain them.
For decades, many horticulture writers have been pleading for a fresh appreciation of our American flora, and for almost as long they have been largely (or entirely) ignored. For several reasons, however, the day of the native ornamental is drawing near; the message is finally beginning to be heard. If I were to ask a random group of gardeners to comment on the importance of native plants in their gardens, they would probably recount several arguments that have been made in recent years in favor of natives over alien ornamentals. They might describe the “sense of place” that is created by using plants that “belong” or the dangers of releasing yet another species of invasive alien to outcompete and smother native vegetation. They might recognize the costly wastefulness of lawns populated with alien grasses that demand high-nitrogen fertilizers, broad-leaf herbicides, and pollution-belching mowers. Or they might mention the imperative of rescuing endangered native plants from extinction. These are all well-documented reasons for the increasing popularity of growing native plants.
Owners of native nurseries are also finding it easier and easier to enumerate the benefits of their offerings. Native plants are well adapted to their particular ecological niche and so are often far less difficult to grow than species from other altitudes, latitudes, and habitats. After all, these plants evolved here and were growing just fine long before we laid our heavy hands on the landscape.
Most compelling to me, however, is the use of native species to create simplified vestiges of the ecosystems that once made this land such a rich source of life for its indigenous peoples and, later, for European colonists and their descendants. That most of our ecosystems are no longer rich is beyond debate, and today, most of the surviving remnants of the native flora that formed them have been finished off by development or invaded by alien plant species. Too many Oak Parks, Hickory Hills, and Fox Hollows—developments named, as the environmentalist Bill McKibben has noted, for the bit of nature they have just extirpated—have been built across the country. Although relatively small, strategically placed and connected patches of completely restored habitats might foster the survival of some of our wildlife, I will describe later why such habitat islands can only protect a tiny fraction of the species that once thrived in North America. With 300 million human souls already present in the United States and no national recognition of the limits of our land’s ability to support additional millions, we simply have not left enough intact habitat for most of our species to avoid extinction. All species need space in order to dodge the extinction bullet. So far we have not shared space very well with our fellow earthlings. In the following pages, I hope to convince you that, for our own good and certainly for the good of other species, we must do better. Native plants will play a disproportionately large role in our success.
The transition from alien ornamentals to native species will require a profound change in our perception of the landscaping value of native ornamentals. Europeans first fell in love with the exotic beauty of plants that evolved on other continents when the great explorers returned home with beautiful species no one had ever seen before. It quickly became fashionable and a signal of wealth and high status to landscape with alien ornamentals that no one else had access to. As the first foreign ornamentals became more common in the landscape, the motivation to seek new alien species increased. Even today, the drive to obtain unique species or cultivars is a primary factor governing how we select plants for our landscapes.
Detalles del producto
- Editorial : Timber Press; 2. edición (1 Abril 2009)
- Idioma : Inglés
- Tapa blanda : 360 páginas
- ISBN-10 : 0881929921
- ISBN-13 : 978-0881929928
- Dimensiones : 6 x 0.81 x 9 pulgadas
- Clasificación en los más vendidos de Amazon: nº7,787 en Libros (Ver el Top 100 en Libros)
- Opiniones de clientes:
Sobre el autor

Douglas W. Tallamy is Professor and Chair of the Department of Entomology and Wildlife Ecology at the University of Delaware in Newark, Delaware. Chief among his research goals is to better understand the many ways insects interact with plants and how such interactions determine the diversity of animal communities.
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Attention Gardeners…this is a must read!
Opiniones destacadas de los Estados Unidos
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Calificado en Estados Unidos el 30 de junio de 2015This book is terrific. I had checked it out of the library, and then wanted to have a copy of my own. I have gardened and farmed for many years, on a small suburban plot of land. I have seen all the farmland around me be developed into large suburban subdivisions, and seen yards that used to be natural and graceful become more and more sculpted, with lawns that are more like carpets, and a formality more like a living room than a beautiful outdoor space. Lawn services have replaced individual homeowner mowing, and now instead of just mowing, there is edging and blowing and removal of any natural leaf debris that is so important for the many species that a complex ecosystem supports. Many developments have Homeowner Associations that require that it be done this way. Many of them also require the right to approve the planting of anything beyond 3 feet of the house, resulting in a loss of diversity there as well.
Even in neighborhoods without HOA's, the trend has been toward sculpted yards and the planting of ornamentals that are often non-native. As a result, there are fewer and fewer songbirds, butterflies, and more and more "pests" that the birds and other wildlife would have managed. I was contributing to this without realizing it, by planting non-native trees or shrubs based only on "beauty," but not with an eye to the species they support or the healthy ecosystem they make possible. Dr. Tallamy explains all of this so easily and clearly, and the many charts and lists provide accessible and quick information.
This book can guide you to better choices when you're adding a new tree or shrub or flower to your yard, it can guide you to simple steps that add a very important diversity to your yards plants, and the species they support. It's like, without realizing it, you can offer so many beneficial species food to support a healthy complex web, or inadvertently be part of the starving and loss of beneficial species we want and need, just by choosing a different plant or tree, or doing things a little differently.
He shows you how to do this within what you already have. And you notice the difference in even a short period of time. The word seems to go out, and the species arrive! In the past two days I have seen two different species of butterfly I never saw here before. Even things as simple as leaving a "weed" I would have otherwise removed - milkweed - we were actually able to watch monarchs go from egg to larvae to chysalis to butterfly, in our own yard, from plants in my ditch I would have just mowed down.
There are so many things we can't do as we see the loss of farmland and wild places around us. This book shows how much we can do, even on a little yard, or even balcony. My yard is more beautiful, and the birds and wildlife is a joy every single day. I even appreciate and notice beneficial insects I never would have noticed, and possibly would not have had.
It also helps us pass on the information so our friends and neighbors - and HOA boards - don't inadvertently contribute to the problem, and help them see how easily they can make a positive difference.
The book is well written, clear, positive, approachable. It is not a "just for scientist" kind of book, and he does not lecture. It's delightful to read.
I love this book and recommend it highly, for yourself, and as a gift for every gardener/homeowner that you know. It is not a book your gardening/homeowner friends might have known about or thought of, but they will appreciate it, and use it, and pass the information on to their children. And in the best kind of way - it doesn't preach, it's like taking a walk outside with a favorite uncle who knows all about the beauty and wonder around you, and is generous and fun enough so you can too.
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Calificado en Estados Unidos el 9 de diciembre de 2024I love Tallamy’s books. He is a professor of entomology and ecology. He uses his home site as his laboratory, as well as direct students on environmental projects. I have learned a great deal from his writings, and will automatically buy any new title. I have also heard him speak on two occasions.
I feel many people have lost their connection to nature or do not understand how we humans are intrinsically linked. This book helps explain how we can use our homesite to support nature and the critters that share our space. There is so much research that supports how humans need to spend time in nature to keep oneself balanced. I think much of the anxiety we hear about and the need for drug use is directly due to our lack of understanding that we are part of the natural world, and need to foster our connections to it.
If you want to bring nature home to create a more healthy habitat for you and your family, this book is the place to start. There is a great deal of practical information, as well as basic ecological concepts. Read it!
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Calificado en Estados Unidos el 24 de marzo de 2009Bringing Nature Home, by Douglas Tallamy, has the numerical data to support the use of native, rather than alien, plants in our gardens. There are a lot of good books on native plants, but none quite like this one. Look at p. 235. He shows how many insects that pretty clematis vitalba on your fence, which has been in North America for 100 years, can support: one North American herbivore insect species. ONE. In its homeland, clematis supports 40 insects. That shallow rooted fire hazard Eucalyptus tree? It supports one North American herbivore insect species. The Eucalyptus has been here for 100 years and it supports ONE native insect. In its homeland, the Eucalyptus supports 48 insects.
According to Dr Tallamy, 96% of the US is urban, suburban or agricultural. The remaining 4% is left for the natives. No native plants = no native insects, butterflies, birds and other pollinators. No native pollinators - and you wonder why your fruit and vegetable garden is so much work.
Bringing Nature Home has appendices which include useful native plant lists for sections of North America and a list of host plants for butterflies and moths. The author is based is in Pennsylvania, so the east coast/mid-Atlantic plant and insect info is quite complete. The info on Japanese beetles is worth the price of the book, if this is an issue for you.
If you plant in California, other native plant books (with long lists of plants and pretty color photos, not as much info about insect and bird partners):
California Native Plants for the Gardenby Carol Bornstein, David Fross, Bart O'Brien
Designing California Native Gardens: The Plant Community Approach to Artful, Ecological Gardens
by Glenn Keator and Alrie Middlebrook
Tending the Wild: Native American Knowledge and the Management of California's Natural Resources
by M. Kat Anderson - great intro to what California natives are good for food
Las Pilitas Nursery has an extensive website with color photos, sun/water requirements and some insect and bird partner info for California native plants.
[...]
If you are interested in what happens when the plant partners are no longer around (you might be after you read Bringing Nature Home), read The Ghosts of Evolution: Nonsensical Fruit, Missing Partners, and Other Ecological Anachronisms by Connie Barlow.
Please consider planting native plants in your yard. These plants are pretty and easy to care for because they belong here. Making a home for native pollinators could save our food - and our lives.
Opiniones más destacadas de otros países
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Varun SharmaCalificado en India el 15 de julio de 20145.0 de 5 estrellas An amazing book and guide to native nature gardens
I have already a copy of this book at my working place, author of this book has done tremendous job for conserving natives and natural habitats. Bringing Nature Home is an excellent work.
SADOT OCON MORALESCalificado en México el 22 de septiembre de 20185.0 de 5 estrellas Excelente visión del paisaje
El libro me ayudo con la materia de Ecología del Paisaje, los alumnos de arquitectura tenían la visión de cementar cualquier espacio y colocar pasto únicamente, ahora saben los inmensos beneficios que trae consigo un buen diseño de paisaje y jardinado usando plantas nativas.
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FjCalificado en Canadá el 9 de julio de 20245.0 de 5 estrellas Book
Great book
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sherlockCalificado en Canadá el 16 de febrero de 20185.0 de 5 estrellas Easy to read but very thought provoking
Easy to read but very thought provoking. If we can grasp these no nonsense principles it would change our view of planting forever...and for the better. A great companion to The Living Landscape (Darke & Tallamy) Truths hidden in plain site.
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DesireeCalificado en Reino Unido el 30 de septiembre de 20194.0 de 5 estrellas Oh, I wish it was written about the UK
But the concept of native planting carries over, its just the plants are different.

