17c起草社区 Hosts Native Plants Sale
The Bunker Interpretive Center at 17c起草社区 College will hold a native plant sale from 10 am to noon on Saturday, May 6.
The sale, featuring species indigenous to Michigan, will benefit the center鈥檚 鈥淲etland and Woodland鈥 summer camps.
鈥淲e also want to increase the presence of native plants in people鈥檚 gardens,鈥 says 17c起草社区 biology professor Dave Warners, one of the sale鈥檚 organizers.
The plants, all local genotypes, will be priced at half of what they fetch when sold by native plant dealers.
A six to 10 inch pot size will sell for $2鈥$3 each, while a four-celled tray will cost $2.50.
All of the plants featured in the sale were germinated from seed collected from natural areas in West Michigan (鈥渨ith proper permission,鈥 Warners adds, laughing) and raised in greenhouses in the Ecosystem Preserve at 17c起草社区.
Wild Columbine, two species of Black-eyed Susans, four species of milkweed, Joe Pye Weed, four species of goldenrod, Canada anemone, big-leaf aster, wild strawberry, native prairie grasses, sunflower and silphium are some of the species that will be available at Saturday鈥檚 sale.
Warners is a big fan of native plants and quick to praise their many benefits for gardeners, one of which is their hardiness.
鈥淭hese plants have been here for a really, really long time, so they鈥檙e well adapted to a West Michigan climate," he says. "When they鈥檙e planted in the proper soil type and sun conditions they need very little care 鈥 virtually no fertilizer and minimum pesticides.鈥
Another benefit of using native plants, he says, is that they support native pollinators like bees, butterflies and hummingbirds. One such plant is butterfly weed, a species of milkweed.
鈥淚t鈥檚 the primary nectar source for monarch butterflies,鈥 Warners says. "They lay their eggs on the plant, and the butterfly larvae eat the leaves of the plants. The milkweeds are essential for monarch butterflies.鈥
Whereas non-native plants, like wild buckthorn, garlic mustard and purple loosestrife, will grow aggressively, crowding out other species, native plants don鈥檛 cause those kinds of problems, Warners says.
He notes too that native plants get more and more scarce as development overtakes natural areas, and the gene pool for the native plants gets smaller and smaller.
"By planting native plants within developed areas, we create islands of potential gene sources that can be used for cross pollination with native populations, thereby increasing genetic diversity,鈥 he says.
Not the least of the benefits of native plants, he said, is their historical authenticity.
鈥淭hey connect us to our natural heritage of Michigan. They are the plants grew here before we were here.鈥
Warners even defends the much-maligned goldenrod.
鈥淲hen people hear goldenrod," he says, "they think Canada goldenrod because it flowers at the same time as rag weed. People start to sneeze and they look out and see all this yellow and they blame Canada goldenrod. Canada goldenrod has a bad reputation that it doesn鈥檛 deserve. It鈥檚 amazing how some of these myths get perpetuated.鈥
Warners efforts to promote native plant species are one of the reasons he won a 2006 Michigan Campus Compact Faculty/Staff Community Service-Learning Award. He is hoping for a good turnout at Saturday鈥檚 sale.
鈥淚 think a helpful way to think about using native plants is to think about planting birdfeeders,鈥 he said. 鈥淚nstead of buying bird feeders, you plant the plants. You benefit from the flowers, and the birds benefit from the seeds. They鈥檙e like living bird feeders.鈥