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  2. Beneficial insect - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beneficial_insect

    In horticulture and gardening, beneficial insects are often considered those that contribute to pest control and native habitat integration. Encouraging beneficial insects, by providing suitable living conditions, is a pest control strategy, often used in organic farming, organic gardening or integrated pest management.

  3. Native Plant: The many benefits of sassafras - AOL

    www.aol.com/native-plant-many-benefits-sassafras...

    Native Plant: Tall coreopsis is the symbol of summer in central Ohio Fall color is similarly varied on the same tree, from yellow to red to purple. In other ways, it is a colorful tree ...

  4. Pocket prairie - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pocket_Prairie

    A pocket prairie is a small, artificially created, self-sustaining area of land where forbs and plants predominate. [1] Oftentimes these plants are native. Pocket prairies are typically found in urban and suburban areas where there exists a lack of vegetation and wildlife (e.g. vacant lots, backyards, green spaces). [2]

  5. Master Gardener: Using native plants can support wildlife - AOL

    www.aol.com/master-gardener-using-native-plants...

    Some eat harmful bugs and, most importantly, pollinate our trees and shrubs, which means everyone is happy: insects, animals and people. Choosing native plants takes a little bit of research.

  6. Cleomella serrulata - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cleomella_serrulata

    In traditional Native American and frontier medicine, an infusion of the plant is used to treat stomach troubles and fevers, and poultices made from it can be used on the eyes. [ 7 ] [ 27 ] As a dye, the plant can be boiled down until it is reduced to a thick, black syrup; this was used as a binder in pigments for painting black-on-white ...

  7. Common walkingstick - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Common_walkingstick

    A pair of mating D. femorata in the Hudson Highlands region of New York. The common walkingstick is a slender, elongated insect that camouflages itself by resembling a twig. . The sexes differ, with the male usually being brown and about 75 mm (3 in) in length while the female is greenish-brown, and rather larger at 95 mm (3.7 i

  8. Aesculus flava - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aesculus_flava

    The twigs have a faintly rank odor, but much less so than the Ohio buckeye, A. glabra. The fruit is a smooth (spineless), round or oblong capsule 5–7 cm (2.0–2.8 in) in diameter, containing 1-3 nut -like seeds , 2.5–3.5 cm (0.98–1.38 in) in diameter, brown with a whitish basal scar.

  9. The Ohio State Fair wants fairgoers to kill these invasive ...

    www.aol.com/ohio-state-fair-kindly-asks...

    Spotted lanternflies, an insect native to Southeast Asia that scientists say arrived in the U.S. seven years ago and in New York City in 2020, feed on the sap of more than 70 plant species ...