UF/IFAS
Okeechobee County Extension
Okeechobee, FL 34972-2578
Phone: (863) 763-6469
E- mail: edayen@ufl.edu
April 4, 2006
Feature Article - for immediate release.
A Wildlife Sanctuary in Your Yard
This is another in a series of articles written about the new area urban conservation program called Florida Yards & Neighborhoods.
Florida has the third most diverse wildlife population of any state; especially here in the south central area. But rapidly growing urban development is destroying native wildlife habitat. Your Florida-Friendly yard can provide habitat for displaced wildlife. As you create a new landscape or improve your existing one, add a few features for wildlife, and you will bring your yard to life with birds, butterflies and beneficial insects. Food, water and cover attract wildlife, but you also need to maintain your yard so the impact it has on the environment is minimal.
To lure wildlife to your yard provide food in the form of plants that bear seed, fruit foliage or flowers that you are willing to have eaten by birds, butterflies and caterpillars.
Running water or a birdbath will also attract wildlife to your yard. Be sure to empty and clean your birdbath every few days to prevent mosquito breeding and bacterial contamination.
To attract birds, design planted areas that include a tree canopy, with shrubs, grasses and flowers underneath. To help draw birds, allow the grasses and flowers to go to seed on occasion. If allowed and not a hazard, leave dead trees in place. Many birds use snags for perching, nesting and feeding.
Butterflies require both larval and nectar plants to live in your yard. To acquire a complete list of suitable plants contact the Master Gardener office at your local county extension office.
Remember to manage your pets. If you permit pets to harass wildlife, you will only frustrate any effort you make toward attracting wildlife.
Apply insecticides responsibly. Each time you apply an insecticide to your yard, you reduce insect population, which form an important food source for birds. You also may be killing butterflies and their larvae.
Reduce the mowed lawn areas around your house. By trading turf for diverse plant species you will create shelter and food for many animal species.
For more information on wildlife in Florida and help in creating a wild-life friendly landscape, visit the Florida Wildlife Extension website, http://www.wec.ufl.edu/extension/landscaping.htm
The Florida Yards and Neighborhoods program is being implemented through your local County Extension Service in Highlands, Okeechobee and Glades County and is partially funded from Clean Water Act Section 319 funding from the U. S. EPA through the Florida Department of Environmental Protection. Ed Ayen is available to address interested groups such as homeowners associations, voluntary organizations and clubs. For further information he can be reached by calling the Highlands County Extension Service office. Phone: (863)402-6540 or email: edayen@ufl.edu His office location is 4509 George Blvd. in Sebring, FL 33875-5837.
More information is available on
the Okeechobee web page, http://okeechobee.ifas.ufl.edu.
If you need additional information on Florida Friendly
Yards, please email us
at okeechobee@ifas.ufl.edu
or call us at 863-763-6469. Local residents can stop
by our office at 458 Hwy 98 North in Okeechobee, and visit
our Okeechobee County Master Gardeners from 1 to 5 PM on
Tuesday afternoons.
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| Trade names, where used, are given for the purpose of providing specific information. They do not constitute an endorsement or guarantee of products named, nor does it imply criticism of products not named. The Florida Cooperative Extension Service - Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences is an equal opportunity/affirmative action employer authorized to provide research, educational information, and other services to individuals and institutions that function without regard to race, color, sex, age, handicap, or national origin. Florida Cooperative Extension Service / IFAS / University of Florida. Larry A. Arrington, Dean Last update: 08/21/2006 . This page is maintained by Dan Culbert |
References
Knox, Gary, et al. Yard Certification Checklist. Gainesville: UF/IFAS Extension Service, (1995). http://hort.ifas.ufl.edu/fyn/certification.pdf
Lofland, Billie, et al. Florida Yardstick Workbook. Gainesville: UF/IFAS Extension Service, (1999). http://hort.ifas.ufl.edu/fyn/Florida-Yardstick-Workbook.htm