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Attract Wildlife with Native
Tropical Landscaping
If you live in the Florida Keys or along the coast,
south of a line from Vero Beach on the Atlantic to Sarasota on the Gulf, you can
include palms and tropical hardwood hammock plant species in your landscaping
plans. These native plants include many berry-producing shrubs and trees that
are very attractive to wildlife.
For trees, good choices include gumbo-limbo, Geiger tree (Florida Keys), coffee
colubrina, mastic, lancewood, Florida royal palm, silver palm, thatch tree,
paradise tree, pigeon plum, sea grape, shortleaf fig, stoppers, strangler fig,
wild lime, wild tamarind and willow bustic. For smaller shrubs and trees, choose
blolly, cocoplum, wild coffee, firebush, Florida trema, marlberry, myrsine,
necklace pod, Florida privet, seven-year apple, spicewood, tetrazygia and
torchwood. Consult a good native plant nursery for advice on selecting and
planting vegetation for your growing conditions. To locate a native nursery near
you, contact the Association of Florida Native Nurseries (AFNN), P.O. Box 434,
Melrose, FL 32666-0434;
www.afnn.org. Or, call toll free: 1-877-352-2366 (1-877-FLA-AFNN). The
Florida Native Plant Society also provides information and publications. Contact
them at P.O. Box 690278, Vero Beach, FL, 32969-0278; 561- 462-0000. Or, visit
their Web site at www.fnps.org.
Want some help creating wildlife friendly landscaping?
Check out Landscaping for Florida’s Wildlife, Re-creating Native Ecosystems
in Your Yard, by Joe Schaefer and George Tanner; available from University
Press of Florida,
www.upf.com, or check out our online version of "Planting
a Refuge for Wildlife" by Susan Cerulean, Celeste Botha and Donna
Legare. |