Stewardship on Private Land

Plant Natives

Native plants: why they are critical for healthy forests and ecosystems

Native plants are indigenous to their local area and provide tremendous benefits to their native environments.1  Sounds simple, but in fact the systems that make native plants so important are complex. A plant is native to a certain area for a reason; it has adapted over thousands of years to form special relationships with other plants, insects, bacteria, fungi, and animals around it.2 As a result, specialized interactions between native plants and animals keep our eco-systems functioning.3

Why we should care

We depend on nature, and therefore we need healthy ecosystems to survive. An abundance of native plants will transform our ravines– it is our plan for survival.

We don’t realize how much we depend on the relationships between all of our native species. In an urban environment, maintaining healthy ecosystems is challenging because we introduce many harmful non-native species through spillover from ornamental gardens. In order to maintain healthy Toronto forests, we must work together to re-nativize our ravines and natural areas. Learn why ravines matter.

For example, look how native Woodland sunflowers interact with native Sweat bees:4

Woodland sunflowers provide sewat bees with food and habitat while the bees enable sunflower s to reproduce via pollination
Photo credit: Pollination Press LLC

Planting natives on your property is extremely important for wildlife and is a necessary step of ravine restoration.

What to Plant

What to Plant

Assess you property and choose natives that will thrive there

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How to Plant

How to Plant

It's not just a matter of sticking a plant in the ground!

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Where to Buy

Where to Buy

Always buy your native plants from a native plant nursery

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Monitor and maintain native plants

Monitor and maintain native plants

Track your progress to ensure success and improve the health of our ravines

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Footnotes

1 – National Wildlife Federation. (n.d.) Native plants. Retrieved from: https://www.nwf.org/Garden-for-Wildlife/about/native-plants

2 – National Wildlife Federation. (n.d.) Native plants. Retrieved from: https://www.nwf.org/Garden-for-Wildlife/about/native-plants

3 – Tallamy, D. (2020). Garden for wildlife: natures best hope [online lecture]. Retrieved May 20, 2020, from: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iDRGryX1uVI

4 – Credit Valley Conservation. (2017). Native plants for pollinators. Retrieved from: https://cvc.ca/wp-content/uploads/2017/04/17-uo-nativeplantsforpollinators-booklet-v8-web.pdf