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News and updates from the statewide UC Master Gardener Program office.
poppies
Comments:
by Marti Rutherford
on June 18, 2015 at 5:08 PM
Support the immature forms of the pollinators too. Plant natives that provide larval food for the butterflies that you want. Welcome the holes that the caterpillars make in your plants. Many insects are specialists. You might need to do a little research to include those plants in your pollinator garden.
by Cathy Konyn
on July 2, 2015 at 7:48 AM
Thank you for such an informative article. And just in time for the Million Pollinator Garden project sponsored by National Pollinator Garden Network.
by Eleu Navarro
on July 15, 2015 at 10:45 PM
Thank you for publishing this article, what a great resource. I used it as an outline to illustrate the importance of habitat to my edible garden students.
by Eleu Navarro
on July 15, 2015 at 10:46 PM
Thank you for publishing this article, what a great resource. I used it as an outline to illustrate the importance of habitat to my edible garden students.
by Jeff Dal Cerro
on October 13, 2016 at 7:14 PM
Marcy, thanks for this great resource which I used to help prepare for a public workshop on pollinator-friendly garden design.
by David Tuttle
on July 23, 2018 at 7:04 AM
Bats are the saver in every term! there are over 1,100 different species of bats that consume huge amounts of insects, including mosquitoes. Some bats can consume as much as 1,000 insects in an hour. Certain other bats also pollinate plants, which is another crucial part of our ecosystem cycle. Even bat droppings, also called guano, is used as a natural fertilizer. Guano works every bit as good as cow patties for fertilizer. https://www.austinbats.org
by Linda Sims
on June 14, 2019 at 8:26 PM
Thanks for this article. Perhaps you could update it and add advice to let leaves stay on the ground overwinter around your plants for insects who live in them until they change form in the spring. I wouldn't be surprised if many moth and butterfly larva and pupa end up in the landfills instead of as adult insects in our garden.
 
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