Doug Tallamy: Restoring Nature’s Relationships at Home
Specialized relationships between animals and plants are the norm in nature rather than the exception. It is specialized relationships that provide our birds with insects and berries, that disperse our bloodroot seeds, that pollinate our goldenrod, and so on. Plants that evolved in concert with local animals provide for their needs better than plants that evolved elsewhere. Tallamy will explain why this is so, why specialized food relationships determine the stability and complexity of the local food webs that support animal diversity, why our yards and gardens are essential parts of the ecosystems that sustain us, and how we can use our landscapes to connect the isolated habitat fragments around us. It is time to create landscapes that enhance local ecosystems rather than degrade them.

Native Keystone Plants for Wildlife - Doug Tallamy

Bringing Nature Home with Douglas Tallamy

Mary Gardiner: Beneficial Insect Biodiversity: What It Is and Why It Matters

Let it Be an Oak with Doug Tallamy

Pollinators’ Best Hope: A New Approach to Pollinator Habitat That Starts in Your Yard, Doug Tallamy

kingdom of plants - Sir David Attenborough

Bumble Bee Biology, Part 1 with Jamie Strange

Next Steps for Nature with Doug Tallamy

LRR Microbiology for FMGE 2026 By Dr. Preeti Sharma

Doug Tallamy: The Nature of Oaks

Free Event: Power BI Beginner to Pro 2026 Edition - Full Hands-On Tutorial

Nature's Best Hope - Conservation That Starts in Your Yard with Doug Tallamy

Native Plants for Native Pollinators

Deciding To Create a Pollinator Garden Is the Easy Step — What To Do Next?Matthew Shepherd

Why We Need Oaks, and How to Save Them with Doug Tallamy

Native Planting and Yard Landscaping Techniques: An Insect's Point of View

Nature's Best Hope by Doug Tallamy: March 3, 2020

Doug Tallamy: The Nature of Oaks: The Rich Ecology of Our Most Essential Native Trees

Nature’s Best Hope: Madison "Noon Zoom"

