Interview with Doug Tallamy - Fine Gardening

An Interview with Doug Tallamy

We very pleased to bring you a special episode of Let’s Argue About Plants today, featuring an interview with Douglas Tallamy, PhD. Several months ago, Christine Alexander, digital content manager for FineGardening.com, sat down with the famed professor of entomology and wildlife ecology at the University of Delaware to discuss how plants can save our planet. Tallamy has spent his life’s work researching the impact of nonnative plant species on the environment with his fieldwork playing a critical role in solving the mystery of the plummeting insect and bird populations seen over the past 50 years. Despite the seemingly larger-than-life problems we face, Tallamy insists there are ways average gardeners can help save our ecosystems. Within the interview we get answers to the questions gardeners want to know like, “Should we be planting only native plants?” And “What are keystone species and why should I be filling my landscape with them?” Tallamy’s message is sometimes misconstrued, especially when it comes to a gardener’s role in the climate crisis. We hope this interview sheds some light and hope on actions steps we can all take to help nature. As Tallamy says, “we’re its last hope.”

This interview was edited for length and clarity. For further reading, check out Douglas Tallamy’s most recent books, The Nature of Oaks (2021) and Nature’s Best Hope (2020).

 

Keystone Plants:

Goldenrod
Goldenrod Photo: Danielle Sherry

White wood aster
White wood aster Photo: Danielle Sherry

Sunflower
Sunflower Photo: Jennifer Benner
  1. Goldenrod (Solidago spp., Zones 3–9)
  2. Aster (Aster spp., Eurybia spp., Symphyotrichum spp.,
    Zones 4–9)
  3. Sunflower (Helianthus spp., Zones 3–9)
  4. Oak (Quercus spp., Zones 2–9)
  5. Cherry (Prunus spp., Zones 3–8)
  6. Birch (Betula spp., Zones 3–9)
  7. Cottonwood (Populus spp., Zones 2–9)
  8. Elm (Ulmus americana, Zones 3 to 9)
  9. Willow (Salix spp., Zones 4-10)

Birch
Birch Photo: Danielle Sherry

Cottonwood
Cottonwood Photo: Danielle Sherry