mevertsen
Well-known member
Ill look up them.Context is important here.
What is a native species?
a plant or animal that originates and lives naturally in a specific geographic area, without human introduction.
A lot of plants we consider native were introduced by people, so by our own definition they aren't native. There is a lot more to that conversation, it's actually pretty interesting and thought provoking.
Framing this as native vs non-native falls into the false dilemma fallacy, and I'm not sure I've ever seen productive conversations from that angle. It's not native or non-native. It's native and non-native. I can show you many different examples of native wildlife relying on non native wildlife/plants. I have personal pictures of native caterpillars utilizing non native plants as host plants, research articles documenting the same. One of my favorite hummingbirds keeps me company year round because they followed non native plants up the coast. Hundreds of examples. Not all are bad, some are.
It's a new world.
If you'd be open to it, I'd highly recommend giving these two books a try.
Where Do Camels Belong? By Ken Thompson
Tending the Wild by M Kat Anderson
It is really interesting what we've done to the world.