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Garden Futurist

Garden Futurist

Pacific Horticulture

Advocates for the power of gardens to heal the environment

65 - Episode XL: Innovative Programs for New Careers in Horticulture with UC Davis
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  • 65 - Episode XL: Innovative Programs for New Careers in Horticulture with UC Davis

    Read the companion article here. Garden Futurist is highlighting examples of innovative programs in the Pacific region that are truly preparing students for the future of horticulture within a variety of careers. There has been some alarm in the last decade around the loss of horticulture and plant related degree and certificate programs. Can we get to the bottom of the conflict in views between talk of a “botanical education extinction” and evidence of younger generations’ growing interest in plants?  Garden Futurist spoke with A. Haven Kiers, Asst. Professor of Landscape Architecture, Department of Human Ecology, University of California, Davis. We also spoke with recent graduate of the program, Mavi Arias. Listed to Part 1 of our Innovative Programs podcast with UCB Botanical Garden here. This episode was sponsored by: Bartlett Tree Experts

    Wed, 24 Jul 2024 - 28min
  • 64 - Episode XIV: Your Keystone Plant Matrix

    Read the companion article here. This episode was sponsored by: Bartlett Tree Experts If you take Keystone plants out of your local food web, the food web collapses, because they are producing most of the caterpillars that run that food web. We found that just 5% of our native plant species are supporting 75% of the caterpillars that are out there. Dr. Doug Tallamy is the T. A. Baker Professor of Agriculture in the Department of Entomology and Wildlife Ecology at the University of Delaware.  He is known for highly acclaimed books including Bringing Nature Home and Nature’s Best Hope.

    Mon, 16 May 2022 - 25min
  • 63 - Episode XIII: Your Pocket Meadow & A Decade of Restoration

    Read the companion article here. This episode was sponsored by: Bartlett Tree Experts With Dr. Nancy Shackelford, Restoration Futures Lab director, and assistant professor of environmental studies at the University of Victoria British Columbia. “In this context, restoration has a lot of meanings. One of those meanings is yes, trying to support the plant species, but it’s also trying to rebuild and support those relationships with people and the practices and the traditions and the histories and the cultures that really existed with those ecosystems. And so in this context, restoration really has a very strong human-nature combination and combined values.” Dr. Nancy Shackelford

    Tue, 19 Apr 2022 - 29min
  • 62 - Episode XII: Words and Culture Matter: Language for a New Era in Plant Ecology

    Read the companion article here. This episode was sponsored by: Bartlett Tree Experts With Dr. Susan Cordell, Director and Research Ecologist, US Forest Service, Pacific Southwest Research Station, Hilo, Hawai'i. How might a more culturally inclusive viewpoint replace negative historical language associated with invasive plant biology? “In many parts of the world, we cannot uncouple the fact that humans and natural systems are linked and that pristine landscapes are often, in fact, a mirage.”  This quote from a paper authored by our guest and colleagues was published recently in Frontiers of Ecology and Evolution. Noticeable right away is that this essay gets very quickly into talking about the language we use when we talk about nature. Our guest and her multi-disciplinary team have taken a unique approach to ecological restoration that considers language and cultural context around how plants in complex ecosystems can be managed. To learn more about Dr. Cordell's work, please read her group's newest paper, inspired by the Liko Nā Pilina experiment: https://www.hawaii.edu/likonapilina/. This is a project using functional traits to promote invasion resistance and native biodiversity. In this perspective, we teamed up with a philosopher to explore the concept and underlying biases towards non-native species.

    Wed, 16 Mar 2022 - 32min
  • 61 - Episode XI: Quercus! genus and genius of Oaks with Dave Muffly

    Read the companion article here. This episode was sponsored by: Bartlett Tree Experts “There's a surprising portion of the entire natural world of all biodiversity that either rests in or on an oak tree. And another huge portion of biodiversity uses oak trees for food. An oak can produce 3 million acorns in its lifetime, but only a tiny handful of those, if any,  will create trees, but those extra acorns are there on the ground waiting to feed just a huge number of organisms from tiny ones all the way up to bears.” Dave Muffly, Senior Arborist and Horticulturist, Santa Barbara, CA.

    Mon, 14 Feb 2022 - 30min
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