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Creating a
Pollinator-
Friendly Yard Stephanie Pitts
Natives are
Easy to Maintain
They’re meant to grow in our
environment
Many spread and fill in so you
need not buy as many plants
Adds Beauty to Your Yard The plants are beautiful
They attract birds, butterflies, bees and other insects
Pollinator-Friendly vs. Pollinator
Unfriendly Yards
A yard with pollinator friendly plants
A well-manicured lawn with few decorative plants
The Yard with Pollinator-
friendly plants:
The Pollinator-
friendly Yard
Pollinators have only a few
basic habitat requirements:
a flower-rich foraging area,
suitable host plants or nests
where they can lay their
eggs, and an environment
free of pesticides (Xerces,
2011).
This yard has a variety of
over 40 pollinator-friendly
plants.
During the two month study of the two yards, the pollinator
friendly results were as follows:
Thirteen bird varieties found in the yard: American robins, gold
finches, house finches, mourning doves, ruby-throated
hummingbirds, black-capped chickadees, tufted titmouse, white-
breasted nuthatch, gray catbirds, northern cardinals, song
sparrows, dark-eyed juncos, and house sparrows.
Butterfly species included: Clouded sulphurs, cabbage whites,
American coppers, commas, buckeyes, pearl crescents, little
wood satyrs, and monarchs.
Other insects found were several varieties of bees, moths, beetles,
and flies.
The Yard with a few decorative
plants:
There aren’t any close-ups because
after over two months of studying this
yard, only the occasional pollinator
was witnessed passing through.
There is essentially nothing for them
to eat and minimal space for even a
bird to take a break.
No food or plants = No pollinators
Bibliography Brooklyn Botanic Garden. Going Native: Biodiversity in Our Own Backyards. Brooklyn, NY, Brooklyn Botanic Garden, Inc., 1994. Print. Brooklyn Botanic Garden. Hummingbird Gardens: Turning Your Yard Into Hummingbird Heaven. Brooklyn, NY, Brooklyn Botanic Garden, Inc., 2007. Print. BugGuide.net. Iowa State University. n.d. Web. < http://bugguide.net/node/view/15740 >. 27 Sept. 2012. Burton, Robert. National Audubon Society: Birdfeeder Handbook. New York, NY, DK Publishing, Inc., 2005. Print. Maescapes.org. Penn State College of Agricultural Sciences Cooperative Extension. n.d. Web. < http://www.maescapes.org > . 27 Sept. 2012. Stokes, Donald W. and Linda Q. Stokes. Stokes Beginners Guide To Butterflies. New York, New York: Little, Brown and Company, 2001. Print. The Xerces Society Guide. Attracting Native Pollinators. North Adams, MA, Storey Publishing, 2011. Print.