by Susan Harris
There’s been lots of news lately about the effects of climate change on our gardens and oddly, it’s usually presented as good news to gardeners. They’re shown rejoicing over the warm-climate plants they can now grow, like crape myrtles in Upstate New York. BUT:
It’s Global Weirding
- Some plants are failing because the winter cooling period isn’t long enough. And others, like lilac, Eastern white pine, American arborvitae, Colorado blue spruce, and many junipers, suffer when summer evenings don’t cool down enough. Local garden writers are no longer recommending many of their old favorites for local gardens — like PJM rhododendrons and yews.
- Rain events are more extreme, taking the form of longer droughts and more deluges. Not good for landscapes, for agriculture or for plants in our few remaining natural areas.
- Longer warm periods mean more generations of some pests per year. Others, like the wooly adelgid that’s killing Canadian hemlocks throughout the East, are increasing their number because winters aren’t cold enough to keep them in check.
- Weedy and noxious plants, like poison ivy, honeysuckle and kudzu, thrive in the presence of extra carbon dioxide, and poison ivy becomes more toxic than ever. Ragweed produces more pollen. Kudzu moves north. Some weeds, like Canadian thistle, are now resistant to herbicides.
- Native plant populations are threatened by these changes in temperature, rainfall, pests and competitors, even the iconic ones chosen as state flowers and trees. In fact, the National Wildlife Federation predicts that 28 states will see their official plants become extinct by the end of the century. Picture Ohio without its buckeye or Kansas without its sunflower. Climate change has become a major threat to plant conservation, along with development and invasive species.
- The East experienced a Miami-style January this year, followed by a frigid February. These alternating balmy+frigid periods take their toll on blossoms and whole plants. Fruit growers were particularly hard hit.
- Hotter summers cause heat stress even to warm-season crops, like tomatoes, according to Cornell University.
More to Come?
The life cycles of insects, including the beneficial ones that keep others in check, may become out of synch with their prey. Pollinators, like the disappearing honeybees, may already be out of synch with the plants they feed on. Science Magazine reported in 2001 that earlier flowering and fruiting has caused such a disconnect for some long-distance migrating birds, who depend on food availability at the same time each year. And to make everything worse, most climate modelers predict more flooding and drought.
Even English Gardens are Adapting
To see how gardeners might adapt to all this change, let’s look first at what’s happening in England, a nation of gardeners. Last summer their southeast region had such a severe drought that sprinklers were banned. With more and longer droughts predicted, it’s clear that the very hallmarks of English gardening are now threatened — their traditional lawns and flower borders.
Thus the U.K. Environmental Minister is urging everyone to change their water usage, plant choice (look for drought- and heat-tolerance), and garden design — in other words, change everything they’re doing. No more roses and delphiniums. The use of gas-powered garden equipment is discouraged. Rain barrels are recommended, as are carbon-sequestering cover crops, like clover and winter rye. Brits are being given at least one bit of advise that fits their culture: plant roots are darn good at absorbing carbon dioxide, so plant more of them.
Changing Our Gardening Practices
Here in the U.S. we see the mainstream gardening media beginning to respond, with both Martha Stewart and Better Homes and Gardens advocating less gas mower and blower usage. Gardening authorities across the U.S. are offering these very good suggestions: add organic matter to make your soil hold moisture better, plant shade trees on the south side of your home to reduce air conditioning loads, and do your planting in fall or early spring. Even turfgrasses can be damaged by the freeze-and-thaw events we’re experiencing, especially where there’s standing water, so we’re being told to fix our drainage problems.
Choosing Different Plants
Research has really just begun, but here are the kinds of plants being recommended by gardening experts in response to global climate change:
Perennials from Mediterranean climates, which thrive without summer rain. Examples are such beautiful and useful plants as lavender, rosemary, sage, catmint, oregano, and thyme. The herb agastache flowers nonstop through the summer and is beloved by bees, and red agastache is a magnet for hummingbirds. Locally native plants are particularly good for sustaining wildlife, but be sure to ask for ones that will survive the new climatic conditions.
Choose trees and shrubs that do well across many temperature zones. Some have seeds that can shift strategies quickly, rather than the generations it usually takes for most trees to adapt to new conditions, which makes them so vulnerable to climate change. Oakleaf hydrangea, serviceberries, deciduous magnolias and many pines are especially adaptable to a range of conditions. Again, the science is evolving, with experts at Cornell currently saying they haven’t yet seen changes that cause long-term damage to trees and shrubs.