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wumbologyandecology · 5 days
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Certainly there were times, and maybe there still are places, where simple neglect will allow a disrupted landscape to return to anything resembling a natural state. But here? On the east coast of the US, where we've been destroying habitat and employing high-control, extractive land management, and expanding urban and suburban areas, for four hundred years now, there is very little left of what was.
The chestnuts are gone. The canebrakes are gone. The wetlands remain only where they were least profitable to remove. The elm suffers, the grasslands are obliterated, the old growth is all logged long since.
I've got front row seats for some of what happens if you leave this land alone. The woods are choked by invasive multiflora rose and Japanese honeysuckle. I don't think I've ever seen a native honeysuckle in person. The fields, left to grow, grow nothing but non-native grasses, poison ivy that sets no berries and feeds no birds, invasive Tree of Heaven saplings that poison the soil with their root exudate, and the occasional hardy locust sapling. There are no flowers there, save a few ironweed and asters late in the year.
If I just leave it alone, those things will keep going, native plants long gone from this place will only appear by some miracle, and this landscape will continue to not support many of the plants, animals, and insects once native to this place. It needs my help. (It needs a lot more than just my help, but we'll see). I can't "return it to its natural state", because ecosystems do not have enduring natural states. But I can see that this land supports a far greater density and variety of native species, and I will do that.
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wumbologyandecology · 6 days
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Ladybugs quench their thirst on raindrops mirroring the reflection of a nearby flower.
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wumbologyandecology · 6 days
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Stone Sculpture by Andy Goldsworthy.
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wumbologyandecology · 7 days
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wumbologyandecology · 7 days
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Alpine Wildflowers
Gosausee May 2024
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wumbologyandecology · 7 days
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Flower memorial laid out for a loved one buried naturally in a field at Mount Auburn Cemetery. - Cambridge, MA
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wumbologyandecology · 7 days
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Red Trillium (Trillium erectum L.) Thetford Hill, Vermont
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wumbologyandecology · 8 days
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The circular island that rotates in Argentina
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wumbologyandecology · 8 days
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Rampo Noir (2005) Suguru Takeuchi, Jissoji Akio, Hisayasu Sato, Atsushi Kaneko
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wumbologyandecology · 8 days
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wumbologyandecology · 8 days
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Godman's Sarota Metalmark (Sarota myrtea), family Riodinidae, Costa Rica
photograph by José Alberto Cubero Guevara
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wumbologyandecology · 8 days
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wumbologyandecology · 8 days
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wumbologyandecology · 8 days
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let me out
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wumbologyandecology · 8 days
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BUY!!!
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wumbologyandecology · 8 days
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Babson Arabian Vlacq Amurrah and her filly Halypa Azeema
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wumbologyandecology · 8 days
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