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In reply to the discussion: A Tree That Was Once the Suburban Ideal Has Morphed Into an Unstoppable Villain [View all]NickB79
(20,395 posts)5. Native species do a better job of sequestering carbon
Because they facilitate a diverse ecosystem and support more biomass overall.
Invasives like this create a monocrop, where it's just bare underneath the canopy. I spent my teen years clearing 30 acres of oak and sugar maple woods on the farm from Tatarian honeysuckle and buckthorn. It was hard, but rewarding, work, especially when the native wildflowers began to regenerate and the songbird population rose.
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A Tree That Was Once the Suburban Ideal Has Morphed Into an Unstoppable Villain [View all]
Demovictory9
Nov 2021
OP
Sorry not true...species like the pear tree do help with the environment just as well as a native
Demsrule86
Nov 2021
#49
Your are off base. Non native invasive plants really hurt our biodiversity, the supportive capacity
Botany
Nov 2021
#8
This reminds me of the guy who used to live across the street from me who removed all the pine trees
GoCubsGo
Nov 2021
#55
All Callery Pears are bad. Bradfords were sold as sterile but they produce viable seed when ...
Botany
Nov 2021
#13
Nursery/Garden Center I worked at sold Edelweiss, Mt. Laurel, some types of azaleas, and sourwood ..
Botany
Nov 2021
#69
I did landscape labor in the 1980's when I was in college. We planted a lot of these.
Gore1FL
Nov 2021
#31
We don't have an invasive tree problem here, but we do have an invasive plant.
BobTheSubgenius
Nov 2021
#33