Herbivore Resistant
There's no such thing as a DEER-PROOF or RABBIT-PROOF plant, but these native plants tend to send browsing mammals into a tailspin thanks to their natural defenses. The three rules of herbivore resistance are 1. Spiky, 2. Stinky, and 3. Sickening. These plants use thorns, strong scents, and toxic secondary metabolites like alkaloids, terpenes, and tannins to protect themselves from being eaten. Balance is key! We want to feed local fauna, but your garden is not an open buffet. Strategically place these plants in high traffic areas while creating browsing zones on the edges of your garden.
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Obedient Plant (Physostegia Virginiana) -
Leatherwood (Dirca Palustris) -
Cutleaf Coneflower (Rudbeckia Laciniata) -
Lemon Beebalm (Monarda citriodora) -
Canada Anemone (Anemone Canadensis) -
Appalachian Sedge (Carex Appalachica) -
American Ipecac (Porteranthus stipulatus) -
Spikenard (Aralia Racemosa) -
Wild Quinine (Parthenium Integrifolium) -
Penn Sedge (Carex Pensylvanica) -
Palm Sedge (Carex Muskingumensis) -
Many-flowered Woodrush (Luzula Multiflora) -
Maidenhair Fern (Adiantum pedatum) -
Late Figwort (Scrophularia Marilandica) -
Common Milkweed (Asclepias Syriaca) -
Prairie Coreopsis (Coreopsis Palmata) -
Virginia Wild Rye (Elymus Virginicus) -
Wild Ginger (Asarum Canadense) -
Prairie Dropseed (Sporobolus Heterolepis) -
Old Field Goldenrod (Solidago Nemoralis) -
Hoary Vervain (Verbena Stricta) -
Dwarf Crested Iris (Iris Cristata) -
Deflexed Bottle-brush Sedge (Carex Retrorsa) -
Balsam Ragwort (Packera Paupercula)