Gardening season is officially underway in Northeast Ohio, and there鈥檚 no shortage of colorful plants at local greenhouses. One option gaining popularity is native plants.
In Ohio alone, there are around 2,000 species of native plants. But what does being native actually mean, and why is it important?
Nancy Linz's interest in horticulture began around the time she was learning to walk, spending time next to her mother in the gardens. Now, she's a native plant conservationist in Cincinnati and president of Ohio Native Plant Month.
鈥淚t鈥檚 been, for me, a lifelong journey,鈥 Linz said. 鈥淚 started going out in the 鈥70s and 鈥80s learning about ornamental plants and, over time, began to really understand more about native plants and why they鈥檙e so critical today to the health of our ecosystems.鈥
By definition, Linz said, native plants are those that have evolved over thousands of years in a specific geographic region alongside local flora and fauna without human intervention.
Ohio has many types of native habitats, including prairies, woodlands and wetlands, each with its own diverse ecosystem.
鈥淭hese plants survive in those areas with their local soils, the water, the amount of rain, the light exposure, the temperatures, the growing conditions,鈥 Linz said. 鈥淲hy are they so important? They provide food and shelter to wildlife.鈥
Many plants, many benefits
鈥淣ative plants are the base of the food chain,鈥 said Judy Barnhart, president of the Native Plant Society of Northeastern Ohio. 鈥淎 lot of insects and birds rely on them.鈥
![A group examines wildflowers along a path while out in nature.](https://npr.brightspotcdn.com/dims4/default/39184b9/2147483647/strip/true/crop/1024x768+0+0/resize/880x660!/quality/90/?url=http%3A%2F%2Fnpr-brightspot.s3.amazonaws.com%2F06%2Ff0%2F8fb2b27f4ae58475d9540ad6e17e%2Fplant-society-wildflower-walk.jpg)
Not only do native plants produce nectar and pollen for butterflies and honeybees, but the foliage is also a valuable food source for other wildlife.
And, Barnhart explains, once local wildlife adapts to plants that are in their immediate environment, there鈥檚 no going back to other varieties.
鈥淏irds and insects evolved with those plants, and they just can鈥檛 switch to non-native plants,鈥 she said.
Linz compares a yard to a grocery store.
鈥淔or every native critter out there, there鈥檚 sort of a menu for them of their preferred plants,鈥 Linz explained. 鈥淲hen you really start to look at some of these very specialized webs of life, it becomes a very complicated but very interesting, delicate, intricate system.鈥
Starting a native garden
The Wilderness Center in Wilmot is a community resource that preserves local habitats and offers educational programming around nature and conservation.
On site, a greenhouse is filled with growing seedlings ranging from flowering plants to prairie grasses, all native to Ohio.
鈥淲e鈥檝e got about 80 species of native plants in here,鈥 said Daniel Volk, director of conservation at the center.
He points to sprouts of orange coneflower, royal catchfly, shooting star and sweet Joe Pye weed.
鈥淭his year was actually the first year that we've ever grown from seed that was collected here on site by staff and volunteers,鈥 Volk said. 鈥淭he entire process, from seed up until giving them away to their new homes, everything was done here on site.鈥
The staff can offer guidance to gardeners looking to add a selection of native plants to their home habitat by building bundles based on what someone may be looking to attract to their yard.
鈥淧eople love things like birds and butterflies and all the beautiful things in nature,鈥 said Mike Hensley, director of education. 鈥淚f we bring these native plants into our yard, we can bring those things too.鈥
Laura Firestone, director of development for The Wilderness Center, was first attracted to native plant gardening to bring birds, bees and butterflies to her yard.
鈥淚 see my backyard as a little habitat restoration, a lily pad, so to speak, that they can kind of hop on as they go from place to place,鈥 Firestone said.
She suggests purple coneflowers as a good starting point for any garden.
鈥淵ou can add that in with pretty much anything you have, and it鈥檚 probably going to perform pretty well for you,鈥 Firestone said.
Hensley adds that for those just getting started with gardening or introducing native plants to a home landscape, patience is key.
鈥淵ou鈥檙e going to make mistakes,鈥 he said. 鈥淭o be a better gardener, you have to be willing to learn.鈥
From the garden to the legislature
When Nancy Linz was studying horticulture in the 鈥70s and early 鈥80s, she can recall one subject that was missing from the curriculum.
鈥淲hen I reflect now and look back on that time, it amazes me that I don鈥檛 remember the words 鈥榥ative plants鈥 being mentioned, ever,鈥 Linz said. 鈥淣ever by a professor, never by another student. It just wasn鈥檛 a thing back then.鈥
So, what changed?
According to Linz, people now have an overall awareness of the environment that they didn鈥檛 have back then.
In 2018, Linz was contacted by former Ohio First Lady Hope Taft, an avid gardener and champion of native plants, with an idea to get legislation passed in the state to set aside a day or week per year in recognition of native plants.
What resulted on July 18, 2019, was a new law designating April as Ohio Native Plant Month.
![Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine signs papers at a desk.](https://npr.brightspotcdn.com/dims4/default/faafa65/2147483647/strip/true/crop/2500x1603+0+0/resize/880x564!/quality/90/?url=http%3A%2F%2Fnpr-brightspot.s3.amazonaws.com%2Fcb%2Fdb%2Fc88224a344a1a18ae2f9460df378%2Fdewine-hb59-native-plant-month.jpg)
鈥淲hen Gov. DeWine signed this bill into law, it made Ohio the first state in the country to have a law supporting native plants for an entire month,鈥 Linz said. 鈥淪o it really put Ohio on the map as leading this initiative, which was awesome.鈥
And she didn鈥檛 stop with Ohio. After success at the state level, Linz worked with then-Ohio Sen. Rob Portman to take Native Plant Month national. Portman was the lead co-sponsor of a Senate resolution that was approved with bi-partisan support, making April 2021 the first National Native Plant Month.
Education and awareness have come a long way since Linz first started her studies, as evidenced by the ever-expanding list of native plant growers and sellers throughout the state .
鈥淚t's growing, and it is growing quickly,鈥 Linz said. 鈥淚 think we have a lot of people that are starting to get on the bandwagon and starting to realize that, 鈥榃ait a minute, I can make a difference.鈥欌