NATIVE
PLANT
INDEX




WILD FLOWERS

WETLAND SOILS

WOODLANDS

FERNS

NATIVE LANDSCAPE

FLOWERS GRASSES

BIRDS

BUTTERFLIES

HONEY BEES

NATIVE/POLLEN BEES

HUMMINGBIRDS

BATS

FEEDING WILDLIFE



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SECTION 1



WILD FLOWERS





PRAIRIE
Large tract of grassland without trees.

PRAIRIE PLANTS
amaranth, aster, coneflower, coreopsis, daylily,
feather red grass, fountain grass, gaura, helianthemum,
joe-pye weed, millet, plume poppy, sage, sedum,
sorghum, sunflower, zinna.




PRAIRIE PLANTS
LINKS




BLUE PLANET BIOMES
http://www.blueplanetbiomes.org/

PRAIRIE NURSERY
http://www.prairienursery.com/

OHIO PRAIRIE NURSERY
http://www.ohioprairienursery.com/

PRAIRIE SOURCE
http://www.prairiesource.com/

PRAIRIE FRONTIER
http://www.prairiefrontier.com/




MEADOW
Dry upland sites or wet lowland enviroments.

MEADOW PLANTS
agastache, bachelor's botton, coreopsis, crocus,
primrose, flax, gaillardia, gaura, godetia, lupine,
milkweed, nemesia, poppy, queen anne's lace, silvia,
daisy, wallflower, yarrow.



MEADOWS PLANTS
LINKS




LESS LAWN
http://www.lesslawn.com/

GARDEN GAL
http://www.gardengal.net/

AMERICAN MEADOWS
http://americanmeadows.com/



BOG
NATURAL STREAMS , PONDS ,WET AREAS
A mixture of sand and acidic humus (organic/plant material),
has ground water and characterized by isolated hummocks of
moss on the surface.



BOG PLANTS
LINKS




INTERNATIONAL CARNIVOROUS
PLANT SOCIETY
http://www.carnivorousplants.org/

BOTANIQUE
http://www.pitcherplant.com/

POND PLANTS
http://www.pondplants.com/





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SECTION 2



WETLAND
SOILS




WATER
The universal solvent, is NOT a
renewable resource. NO new water is
being made, all water is RECYCLED.



PEAT:
Undercomposed organic material.

MUCK:
Decomposed organic material.

MINERAL:
Mostly sand, silt and clay.


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SECTION 3



WOODLANDS




FOREST
Area where soil organic material mix
to a depth of 12 to 18 inches. This
makes for a moist, well drained soil.


Tree canopies that don't quite touch,
with understory trees. Shrubs and
ground cover of flowering wildflowers,
ferns and mosses.


SEE local sources for trees in your local ZONES.
Your best source will be your local,

COOPERATIVE EXTENSION SYSTEM



FOREST SERVICE MOTTO:
CARING FOR THE LAND AND SERVING PEOPLE.




FORESTRY
LINKS




FORESTRY LINKS
http://www.amfor.org

FORESTRY SCIENCE LAB
http://www.fsl.orst.edu

FORESTS FOR LIFE
http://www.panda.org

FOREST STEWARDSHIP COUNCIL
http://www.fscoax.org



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SECTION 4


FERNS




FERNS
A plant that produces spores instead
of seeds and no flowers and that has
leaves that are usually divided into
many parts.




FERNS
http://www.inetworld.net


Resurrection Ferns
Polypodium Polypodioides


Polypody Ferns
Polypodium Virginianum


Walking Ferns
Camptosorus Rhizophyllus

Maidenhair Ferns
Adiantum Pedatum


Lady Ferns
Athyrium Filix-femina


Royal Ferns
Osmunda Regalis


Cinnamon Ferns
Osmunda Cinnamomea





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SECTION 5





NATIVE
LANDSCAPING:
PLANTINGS TO ATTRACT
BIRDS AND ANIMALS






HABITAT FOR LOCAL WILDLIFE
combination of trees, bushes, brushpiles, and
rock piles make the best refuge from weather
and provide basic needs as,

COVER, WATER, and FOOD.
Many areas that attract birds also attract
squirrels, chipmunks and provides food and nesting.


A buffer zone of hedge or row of shrubs and trees are
energy-conserving landscaping. also this acts as
windbreak, that filters dust from air, raise soil
temperature and air, for earlier planting.


Great to protect flowers, fruit trees berries,and
provide habitat for wildlife. Protects soil from
wind and water erosion.


Attracts beneficial insects. Increase the soil
water holding capacity, protects in area with snow.




DEAD TREES:
ATTRACTS
Insect-eating birds, woodpeckers, flying squirrels.


WEEDY AREAS:
ATTRACTS
Seed/insect-eating birds, rabbits.


SHRUBBY AREAS:
ATTRACTS
Birds, deer.



NATIVE
PLANT
LINKS


AMERICAN MEADOWS
http://www.americanmeadows.com

EASTERN NATIVE SEED CONSERVANCY
http://www.enscseeds.org

ERNST CONSERVATION SEEDS
http://www.ernstseed.com

INVASIVE SPECIES
http://www.invasivespecies.gov/

GREEN LANDSCAPING WITH
NATIVE PLANTS
http://www.epa.gov/greenacres/

LADYBIRD JOHNSON WILDFLOWER CENTER
http://www.wildflower.org

NATIVE AMERICAN SEEDS
http://www.seedsource.com

NATIVE GARDENS
http://www.native-gardens.com

NATIVE SEEDS
http://www.nativeseeds.org

NATURE SERVE
http://www.natureserve.org/

THE NORTH AMERICAN
NATIVE PLANT SOCIETY
http://www.nanps.org

PLANT CONSERVATION ALLIANCE
http://www.nps.gov/plants/

PLANTS DATABASE
http://plants.usda.gov/

UNITED PLANT SAVER
http://www.unitedplantsavers.org/

VIRTUAL SEEDS AND FLAGS
http://www.virtualseeds.com

WASHINGTON NATIVE PLANT SOCIETY
http://www.wnps.org

WESTERN NATIVE SEEDS
http://www.westernnativeseed.com

WILD ONES
http://www.for-wild.org



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SECTION 6



FLOWERS
AND
GRASSES:




EASY TO GROW:
Aster, marigold, sunflower, columbine, delphinium, snapdragon,
zinnia, verbena, panic grass, pokeweed, timothy.


ATTRACTS:
Seed-eating birds,song birds,
Finches, juncos, cardinals, towhees and hummingbirds.



GROUNDCOVERS:
Knotweed, snowberry, blackberry, sagebrush, spicebush,
virginia creeper, viburnium, highbush cranberry,
mapleleaf, nannyberry.


ATTRACTS:
Game birds, as grouse and pheasants. Reptiles,
amphibians, and small mammals, such as rabbits.



SMALL TREES AND SHRUBS:
Sumac, firethorn, hawthorn, tartarian honeysuckle, crabapple,
flowering dogwood, red cedar, cherry, mulberry, elderberry.


ATTRACTS:
Pollinating insects,
Grosbeaks, vireos, bluebirds, and catbirds.



TALL TREES:
Boxelder, white oak, birch, white pine, sugar maple,
pinyon pine, colorado spuce, beech, elm, holly, hemlock.


ATTRACTS:
Migrating birds, squirrels,and chipmunks.
Conifers for nuthatchers, waxwings, crossbills.




OAK TREES:

OFFICIAL TREE OF U.S.
ACORN
Food for squirrels, bluejays and woodpeckers.


SQUIRREL
Eat nuts,acorns,wheat,fruit,bird's eggs and mushrooms.
Sometimes leaves, berries, seeds, oak buds, corn, as
well as insects, moth, bird eggs, and nestling birds.
In early spring, flowers, and buds of wild flowers.




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SECTION 7





FOOD
FOR
BIRDS


NOTE:
FRESH WATER, keep ice-free in winter.


SEED EATING BIRDS:
Yellow corn, rice, millet, hemp and sunflower seeds
bread, crackers, nuts.



INSECT EATING BIRDS:


WINTER FEED
Beef suet, peanut butter, and mealworms.

SUET CAKE RECIPE
1 part peanut butter
2 parts birdseed
5 parts cornmeal
1 part beef suet, melted
Combine ingredients, cool and store in
refrigerator, for up to two weeks.
Can be stored in freezer till needed.



TIP:
A few birds and their favorite foods.



BIRDS:
Flickers, wood and other thrushes, swallows.
food:
BEES, WASPS:

BIRDS:
Flycatchers, kingbirds, tanagers and many others.
food:
CICADAS:

BIRDS:
House wrens, crows, cardinals, and many others.
food:
CUTWORMS:

BIRDS:
Bobwhites, robins, cuckoos, catbirds,
brown thrashers, and many others.
food:
FLIES, GNATS, MIDGES:

BIRDS:
Flycatchers, swallows, martins, and many others.
food:
GRASSHOPPERS, CRICKETS, LOCUSTS:

BIRDS:
Most insect-eating birds.
food:
LEAFHOPPERS:

BIRDS:
Wrens, chickadees, warblers, and many others.
food:
LONG-HORNED BEETLES:

BIRDS:
Woodpeckers.
food;
MOSQUITOES, INSECTS:

BAT
MOST BATS
food:
TREEHOPPERS,MOSQUITOES:

BIRDS:
Flycatchers, blackbirds, vireos, kinglets
and many others.

food:
CHECK bird type for diet.



BERRY PLANTS
FOR BIRDS




AMERICAN CRANBERRY BUSH
Viburnum trilobum
Zones 2 to 8.


ARROWWOOD
Viburnum dentatum
Zones 2 to 8.


BARBERRIES
Berberis spp.
Zones 4 to 8.


BLACK CURRANT
Ribes nigrum
Zones 4 to 8.


ELDERBERRIES
Sambusus spp.
Zones 4 to 8.


JUNEBERRIES
Amelanchier spp.
Zones 2 to 8.


STRAWBERRIES
fragaria spp.
Zones 4 to 8.







PLANTINGS
TO ATTRACT
BIRDS TO
YOUR GARDENS

CHECK YOUR LOCAL ZONE
FOR THOSE SUITED TO YOUR AREA:



SHRUBS AND
SMALL TREES
TO ATTRACT BIRDS



BAYBERRY

BLACKHAW

BUCKHORN

CRANBERRY

DOGWOOD

ELDERBERRY

GRAY DOGWOOD

SILKY DOGWOOD

HONEYSUCKLE

INKBERRY

JAPANESE BARBERRY

AUTUMN OLIVE

RUSSIAN OLIVE

PYRACANTHA

WINTERBERRY

VIBURNUM






VINES
TO ATTRACT
BIRDS



BITTERSWEET

GREENBRIER

HALL'S HONEYSUCKLE

VIRGINIA CREEPER

WILD GRAPES








TREES
TO ATTRACT
BIRDS




ALDER

ASH

BEECH

BIRCH

FLOWERING CRAB

FLOWERING DOGWOOD

HAWTHORN

LINDEN

MAPLE

MULBERRY

NORWAY SPUCE

OAK

RED CEDAR

WHITE SPRUCE

HEMLOCK

WHITE PINE

JUNIPER






TREE
LINKS




BOREAL FOREST
http://www.borealforest.org/

TREE BASE
http://www.treebase.org

TREE DICTIONARY
http://www.treedictionary.com/

TREE GUIDE
http://www.treeguide.com

TREE HELP
http://www.treehelp.com



BIRD
LINKS:



BIRDS OF PREY
http://www.birdsofprey.org

BIRD WATCHER
http://www.birdwatchers.com

BIRD WATCHER DIGEST
http://www.birdwatchersdigest.com

NUTTY BIRDWATCHER
http://www.birdnature.com

ROCKY MOUNTAIN EAGLE RESEARCH FOUNDATION
http://www.eaglewatch.ca

WILD BIRD CENTER OF AMERICA
http://www.wildbirdcenter.com

WILD BIRD FOREVER
http://www.birdsforever.com



BIRD
HOUSES
LINKS




WOODWORKER WORKSHOP
http://www.woodworkersworkshop.com/

AMAZING BIRDHOUSE GUIDE
http://www.amazingbirdhouseguide.com/

A BIRDS HOME
http://www.abirdshome.com/



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SECTION 8



PLANTINGS
TO ATTRACT
BUTTERFLIES
BEES
HUMMINGBIRDS




BUTTERFLIES:





Choosing the location for your garden is important.
Butterflies do love sun, they use their wings as
solar panels, warming their bodies so they can
fly. Also, most butterfly plants prefer full sun.
Shrubs and trees will provide the protection that
butterflies need on windy or rainy days, as well
as providing a location for butterflies to roost
at night. Grouping plants with similar needs for
mass effect to attract butterflies is also helpful.




NECTAR
PLANTS:



FOOD:
Eats nectar, tree sap, fruit juices.

Flowering nectar plants are the most
important source of food and nourishment
for adult butterflies. Nectar is a sweet,
sugary substance produced by many flowers.
The butterfly obtains sugars from it that
it needs for energy to surviveand fly.



ATTRACTED TO:
Plants that are deep pink, scarlet, bright
blue and generally very fragrant.





PLANTS:


Native Plants:
Research native varieties available
in your area, zone.





Butterfly Weed
Asclepias Tuberosa

Milkweed
Asclepia Speciosa

Indigo Bush
Amorpha Fruticosa
Amorpha Canescens

Dogbane
Apocynum Androsaemifolium

Shrubby Cinquefoil
Potentilla Fruticosa

Cutleat Coneflowers
Rudbeckia Laciniata

Black-eyed Susan
Rudbeckia hirta




BUTTERFLY
LINKS



BUTTERFLY HOUSE AND FARMS
http://www.butterfly-houses.com

BUTTERFLIES AND MOTHS
http://www.butterflies-moths.com

BUTTERFLY CONSERVATION
http://www.butterfly-conservation.org

THE BUTTERFLY SITE
http://www.thebutterflysite.com

THE BUTTERFLY WEBSITE
http://www.butterflywebsite.com

THE BUTTERFLY HOUSE
http://www.butterflyhouse.org

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF
BUTTERFLY EXHIBITION
http://www.butterflyexhibitions.org




BUTTERFLY
HOUSE
LINKS




THE BUTTERFLY SITE
http://www.butterfly-houses.com/

BUTTERFLY HOUSE WEBSITE
http://www.butterflyhouses.net/

BUTTERFLY HOUSES
http://www.abirdshome.com/butterfly.html/



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SECTION 9



HONEY
BEES






HONEY BEES
Wing insect that gathers nectar and
pollen from flowers and make honey
from the nectar. These bees live in
large, colonies and produce wax.


ATTRACTED TO:
Variety of flowers, fruit blossoms,
shrubs, trees, even some weeds.


food
Eats nector, tree sap, fruit juices.

PLANTS
Alfalfa, aster, basswood, clover, dandelion,
citrus, goldenrod, sage, tupelo
and a variety of blossoming plant.


APIARY
A place where bees are kept,
group of bee hives.


APICULTURE
The art of bee keeping.



HONEY
BEES
LINKS




BEEKEEPING IN NEW ZEALAND
http://www.beekeeping.co.nz/

THE BEEKEEPING PORTAL
http://www.beekeeping.com/

THE BEE WORKS
http://www.beeworks.com/

BLOSSOMLAND SUPPLY
http://www.blossomland.com/

THE BRITISH BEEKEEPER ASSOCIATION
http://www.bbka.org.uk/



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SECTION 9A



NATIVE
POLLEN
BEES






Before Europeans brought honey bees to
North America, pollen bees did all of the
bee pollination work here. (Apoidea) are
called pollen bees, because they are valued
only for their services as pollinators.
Although they do make honey from nectar,
they make only a little of it. There are
over 20,000 species of pollen bees world
wide. Pollen bees have diversified to
occupy all habitats, except underwater
and in Antarctica.




HONEYBEE
NATIVE BEE
PLANTS




Asters
Barberry
Bladder Campion
Black Cherry
Black-eyed Susan
Black Medic
Bluebells
Blue-Eyed Grass
Bird's Foot Trefoil
Blue Weed
Buckthorn
Butter And Eggs
Buttercups
Catnip
Chicory
Chives
Cinquefoil
Choke Cherry
Climbing nightshade
Clover, red
Clover, Sweet
Clover, White Dutch
Cranberry
Dandelion
Dogbane
Echinacea
Fireweed
Elder
Fleabane
Geranium (Wild)
Goat's Beard
Goldenrod
Gooseberry
Hawkweed (yellow, orange)
Hawkweed, mouse ear
Honeysuckle
Joe Pye Weed
Maple Trees
Milkweed
Mossy stonecrop
Mullein
Mustard
Oregano (wild)
Potentilla
Poplar Trees
Purple Loosestrife
Pussy Toes
Queen Anne's Lace
Raspberry(wild)
Rose, Wild
Service Berry
Sumac
St. John's Wort
Stitchwort
Strawberry (wild)
Sweetclover
Thistles
Vetch
Violets
Willow Trees
Yarrow




POLLEN
NATIVE
BEES
LINKS




ATTRA
http://www.attra.org/

GREAT PLAINS NATURE CENTER
http://www.gpnc.org/

MOTHER EARTH NEWS
http://www.motherearthnews.com/

THE NEW FARM
http://www.newfarm.org/

ORGANIC AG INFO
http://www.organicaginfo.org/

POLLINATOR PARADISE
http://www.pollinatorparadise.com/

THE XERCES SOCIETY
http://www.xerces.org/



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SECTION 10



HUMMINGBIRDS:




HABITAT:
Open woodlands, swampy thickets and
other areas with bright flowers.


ATTRACTED TO:
Plants with bright red flowers, that are long
and tubular, suc as bee balm, and honeysuckle.


FOOD:
Feeds on nector and small insects.


PLANTS:

Indian Paintbrush
Castilleja Intregra

Scarlet Bugler
Penstemon Barbatus

Sky Rocket
Ipomopsis Aggregata

Hummingbird Trumpet
Zauschneria Latifolia

Hedge-Nettle
Stachys Coccinea

Columbine
Aquilegia Canadensis

Cardinal Flowers
Lobelia Cardinalis

Autumn Sage
Silvia Greggii




HUMMINGBIRDS
LINKS



OPERATION RUBYTROAT
http://www.rubytroat.org

HUMMINGBIRDS
http://www.hummingbirds.net

THE HUMMINGBIRD SOCIETY
http://www.hummingbird.org

HUMMINGBIRD STUDY GROUP
http://www.hummingbirdsplus.org

THE HUMMINGBIRD WEBSITE
http://hummingbirdwebsite.com

HUMMINGBIRD WORLD
http://hummingbirdworld.com

MSCHLOE
http://www.mschloe.com

WILD BIRDS FOREVER
http://www.birdsforever.com

WILD BIRDS UNLIMITED
http://www.wbu.com



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SECTION 11



BATS:




Any of a group of mammals
that fly by means of long
limbs modified into wings.

One bat may eat 3,000 or more insects,
including many mosquitoes, in a single
night. Fruit-eating bats are nature's
most important seed-dispersing mammals.




BAT
LINKS



BAT CALLS
http://www.batcalls.org/

BAT CONSERVATION INTERNATIONAL
http://www.batcon.org/

THE BAT CONSERVATION TRUST
http://www.bats.org.uk/

BATCON
http://www.batcon.org/

BAT WORLD
http://www.batworld.org/

ORGANIZATION FOR BAT CONSERVATION
http://www.batconservation.org/



BAT HOUSES
LINKS




BATCON
http://www.batcon.org/

NOBLE KNIGHTS
http://www.nobleknights.com/

BAT HOUSE PLANS
http://www.houseplansrus.com/bathouseplans/



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SECTION 12



FEEDING
WILDLIFE




BEWARE:
OF FEEDING WILDLIFE
ALL WILDLIFE IS

WILD:



RABBITS:
Fresh vegetables, some fruits.

RACCOONS:
Fresh, canned, and smoked fish,
watermelons, sweet corn.


SKUNKS:
Chickens entrails, canned or fresh fish,
insect larvae.


SQUIRRELS:
Cereals, grains, nuts(ESPECILLY PEANUTS)
sunflower seeds, oatmeal mixed with peanut
butter mixed with molasses, popcorn, milo.


WEASELS:
Fish, fesh liver, chicken entrails.

WOODCHUCKS:
Beans, peas, corn, lettuce.

CHIPMUNKS:
Fruit pits, unroasted peanuts, corn, sunflower seeds,
peanuts butter, cereals, grains, popcorn.


FLYING SQUIRRELS:
Apples, seeds, peanuts.

GOPHERS:
Breads, peanut butter mixed with molasses.

MUSKRATS:
Fresh vegetables, carrots, fruits.

OPOSSUM:
Vegetables, apples, chicken entrails,
sardines, bacon.


PORCUPINES:
Apples, carrots, other fruits.



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