[MAIPC] Philly Street Trees
Kathi Mestayer
kwren at widomaker.com
Fri Feb 3 07:10:04 PST 2017
I’m wondering whether the NPS might have some data on success rates of planted natives in different parts of the country.
just a thought….
k
Kathi Mestayer
105 Gilley Drive
Williamsburg, Va 23188
kwren at widomaker.com
757-229-6575
757-784-7395 (cell/text)
"I need something to ignore, so I can focus." - Kathi Mestayer
> On Feb 3, 2017, at 9:25 AM, Muth, Norris (MUTH) <MUTH at juniata.edu> wrote:
>
> Nathan,
> I’m glad you picked up on this. Perhaps someone on the listserve has a contact with Philadelphia Parks and Rec.
>
> My personal view is that we might want to try to move towards something of a white-list type of advice where MAIPC or others could work towards getting these lists moved more and more towards native species and non-invasives (dare I say, that have gone through “extreme vetting?” I dare). If we could get some evidence-based information on where these non-natives have been used and for how long, it might be reasonable to give them a different designation than less well studied non-natives. I see this approach as entirely a pragmatic one (I’d prefer that nurseries produced far more diversity and abundance of native species so that they would be easier to recommend or mandate) - but at least this approach could make some inroads towards these types of plantings doing less damage and it might be more successful than a full frontal assault that could be more easily ignored and would be difficult to implement at best.
>
> Best,
> Norris
>
> ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
> Norris Z. Muth, Associate Professor of Biology
> muth at juniata.edu<mailto:muth at juniata.edu>
>
> office: 1054 VonLiebig Center for Science
> Office Hours Spring 2017
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>
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> ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
>
> From: Nathan Hartshorne <nshartshorne at gmail.com<mailto:nshartshorne at gmail.com>>
> Date: Thursday, February 2, 2017 at 5:05 PM
> To: "MAIPC Listserve (maipc at lists.maipc.org<mailto:maipc at lists.maipc.org>)" <maipc at lists.maipc.org<mailto:maipc at lists.maipc.org>>
> Subject: [MAIPC] Philly Street Trees
>
> Hi all,
>
> My roommate was applying for an internship with them and came across the list of approved Philly street trees. Recently Philly has made a push for more planting similar to NYC's. Well, she knows a lot about invasives due to her proximity to me talking about them. We were very disappointed to find a number of non-natives (regionally non-native as well). Other than crabapples (which I can't tell what species they are since they are all cultivars), I didn't immediately recognize any as commonly naturalizing, but as we all know that doesn't mean much for the future, and doesn't do as much for the environment anyways.
>
> So I was wondering what we could do as an organization (aside from me writing a letter to them since I live here). An impact here could make a huge difference given the geographical size of the city. Perhaps any contacts with NYC million trees program could be useful. Here is the list:
> http://www.phila.gov/ParksandRecreation/environment/Documents/PPR%20Approved%20Street%20Tree%20List.pdf
>
> Nathan
>
>
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