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‘Re-Wilding’ Your Property May Help the Environment

时间:2020-03-26 23:13:01

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This week, a group of environmental activist1 groups, including the World Wildlife Fund2, called on European Union leaders to support re-wilding efforts.

"Re-wilding" is a conservation effort aimed at returning land to its more natural, uncultivated state. This movement is growing in popularity3 around the world, especially in cities and towns where short grass covers most areas, also called lawns5, around houses and other buildings.

Replacing grass lawns with a diverse6 group of native plants that flower and fruit can help support wildlife, including bees and other insects.

American Dan Jaffe is a plant scientist with the Norcross Wildlife Sanctuary7 in Wales, Massachusetts. He spoke8 to the Associated Press about the process of re-wilding.

"The great thing about working with native plants is that these are plants that will grow in any conditions you can think of," he said. "There is no need to bring in problem plants when there are so many other options."

Part of the process of re-wilding means changing the way most people attend to their green spaces. For example, it is not a good idea to clean up your garden immediately at the end of the growing season. It is better to leave dead plants as they are.

"Birds who eat seeds appreciate it when you don't deadhead flowers," said Theresa Badurek, a horticulture agent with University of Florida Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences. She added that less cutting of plants and grass lets pollinators get to flowers.

Badurek says fallen leaf collection should be limited too. The remains9 of the garden and lawn4 provide food and shelter for important insect life.

No area is too small, she added. "Every space we can provide for nature to blossom10 is valuable."

Jaffe says it is a good idea to tell neighbors about your re-wilding project or they might misunderstand your effort as simple laziness.

"The early stages of the work can look like a mess," he said. It can take a few years before it looks good he adds.

Jaffe also said people should only use chemicals on their green spaces if they are absolutely necessary.

"Chemicals are a tool in the toolbox," he said. In some situations, invasive plant species11 require the use of herbicides. It can mean the difference between a re-wilding project succeeding or failing, Jaffee said.

Words in This Story

uncultivated – adj. not prepared or used for growing crops or plants

diverse – adj. made up of people or things that are different from each other

option(s) - n. a choice or possibility

appreciate – v. to be thankful for something

deadhead – v. to remove dead flowers from (a plant

pollinator(s) – n. a creature that gives a plant the very fine usually yellow dust that is produced by other plants of the same kind so that the plants can produce seeds

blossom – v. to change, grow, and develop fully12

laziness – n. the condition of not liking to work hard or to be active


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