Bees and other insects seldom visit the guava
flowers and they are pollinated almost entirely by birds. As the
bird yanks on a petal, the pollen is shaken from the stamens onto
the pistil and fertilization takes place. I first noticed this
with mocking birds, and then with Hooded Orioles. Today is the
first time I’ve seen a sparrow doing this work. The sparrow may
not know it but he (she?) is making sure that I’ll have a good
crop of guavas this fall.
Just yesterday I was speaking to a group of
gardeners at the Los Angeles Garden Club about my new book, Safe
Sex in the Garden. I mentioned how terribly common whitefly
infested hibiscus plants were becoming now in California,
especially in the LA area. I explained that when insects such as
whitefly, aphids, scale, or mealybugs feast on our ornamental
plants, they secrete a gooey, nutrient rich substance we
euphemistically call
honeydew. On this honeydew mold spores land and quickly start
to grow. The mold flourishes as long as it has a continuing source
of insect-supplied honeydew.
As the mold grows and spreads it turns the
infested leaves and stems a fuzzy white or a sooty looking black.
The entire effect is one of dirtiness, as indeed it is. The mold
reproduces itself by releasing billions microscopic sized airborne
mold spores. These spores float in the air, we inhale them, and
allergy and asthma are the result.
Today there is suddenly great interest in indoor
toxic mold, and yet outside in too many of our gardens there is
another mold spore epidemic underway.
I often write and speak about male plants in our
gardens and male cloned street trees lining our city streets, and
about all the allergenic pollen that these clones produce. Often
overlooked in this discussion is the effect of mold spores from
our landscapes. Overlooked even more is the contribution to our
good health from small birds.
Yesterday after my talk a lady told me that she
always feeds the birds in her yard and had done so for many years.
She said she feeds them crumbled up small bread crumbs and that
some 25 to 30 birds await her every morning. She also said that
her own hibiscus plants are thriving, full of flowers, and unlike
those of her neighbors, are bug free. "I see the birds eating the
whiteflies and aphids from the hibiscus," she said. "I know that
they are what is keeping it so clean."
She is completely correct in this assumption too.
I too have seen small birds picking clean an infested bush. One
day several years ago a friend and I sat in his kitchen and
watched as a small flock of tiny gray bushtits alighted in the
blue mallow shrub next to the window. We knew the bush was loaded
with aphids because we’d just been talking about it. As we watched
the little birds jumped from branch to branch, eating aphids. A
half hour later when we went outside, the entire bush was aphid
clean.
Sometimes you will read that seed-eating birds
just eat seeds, but this isn’t true at all. Almost all wild birds
eat insects; even humming birds eat a great many tiny insects each
day. And so, I encourage you all to feed the birds, to encourage
wild birds in your yard. Not only may they pollinate your guava
trees, but they will also help rid your garden of insect pests;
all the while making the air you breathe fresher and cleaner.
Thomas Leo Ogren is the author of
Allergy-Free Gardening
and the just released,
Safe Sex in the Garden.
Visit with Tom at his website:
www.allergyfreegardening.com
This article Copyright ©2003 - Thomas Leo Ogren. Reproduced with
permission.