Seedtime

By Anita Sanchez

One of the great plea­sures of being a gar­den­er is perus­ing the seed cat­a­log for next year’s gar­den. We sit by the wood stove and flip through the bright­ly col­ored pages, plan­ning which seeds to buy for the annu­al spring plant­i­ng. All of last year’s fail­ures will be rototilled under and for­got­ten, and the spring will start a whole new year of bril­liant gar­den­ing success.

But the fun­ny thing is that this habit of spring plant­i­ng is a human cus­tom. Nature does her seed plant­i­ng at the oppo­site pole of the year — in the fall.

How many seeds will you walk past in a short stroll at the Arbore­tum? thou­sands? mil­lions? Every sin­gle gold­en­rod flo­ret pro­duces a sin­gle seed. Every sin­gle tiny white Queen Anne’s lace flower pro­duces a seed. Milk­weed, this­tle, jew­el­weed, all are gone to seed now. The cen­ter of every sun­flower, daisy, and black-eyed Susan is a trea­sure trove of seeds. Dog­wood berries line the trails. Wild grapes fes­toon the branch­es overhead.

Not to men­tion the for­est har­vest. Acorns car­pet the for­est floor. Apple seeds inside bright fruits clunk down to the ground. Squir­rels are busy plant­i­ng hick­o­ry nuts and black wal­nuts. And many crea­tures — birds, chip­munks, squir­rels, rac­coons, mice, and maybe even a bear or two! — are feast­ing on grapes, berries, and wild cherries.

It’s a ques­tion often asked: do bears poop in the woods? The answer is yes, and it’s a good thing, too. Plants can’t get up and walk around, so they have to find a way to col­o­nize new areas. Hun­dreds of types of plants depend on ani­mals to do their gar­den­ing” for them, since many types of seeds can’t ger­mi­nate with­out first tak­ing a trip through an animal’s stomach.

Wild cher­ry seeds, for instance, are hard and bit­ter, so when an ani­mal eats them, the pits don’t get chewed, and the animal’s diges­tive tract begins to break down the hard shell. When the crit­ter final­ly excretes the cher­ry seed, it’s all ready to get grow­ing. And, as a bonus, the seed is sur­round­ed by a con­ve­nient mound of fer­til­iz­er. All the oth­er soft mushy stuff in the drop­ping con­tains min­er­als and nutri­ents the plant needs to grow strong, like a vit­a­min pill for plants. Botanists with the Nation­al Park Ser­vice who exper­i­ment­ed with pot­ting seeds from a sin­gle drop­ping from a black bear were able to ger­mi­nate more than a thou­sand seedlings.

Plants adver­tise” their wares to their seed-dis­pers­ing cus­tomers. Most fruits are tasty, sweet-smelling, or bright­ly col­ored so they stick out in the land­scape. It’s almost as if the plants are say­ing: Come eat me! 

And the best part (from the plants’ point of view) is that ani­mals don’t deposit their waste imme­di­ate­ly after eat­ing — it takes hours or even days to digest a meal. By then, the ani­mal may have trav­elled many miles from the par­ent plant. The seeds spread to a whole new envi­ron­ment to grow. 

And of course, plants dis­perse seeds in oth­er ways too. Some use the wind, let­ting wings or para­chutes car­ry the crop for hun­dreds of feet — or hun­dreds of miles. Some seeds are hooked or barbed, and hitch a ride stuck to a rabbit’s fur, a dog’s tail, or your socks. 

So next time you take a fall ram­ble, watch nature, the ulti­mate gar­den­er, at her work of plant­i­ng. All those uncount­able num­bers of seeds will lie wait­ing under the snow till spring. Right now the trails at the Arbore­tum are ripe with next year’s possibilities.


Fall 2020

Volume 38 , Number 3

Share this

The Latest from Landis

Oct 07, 2023 | Nolan Marciniec

The Landis community mourns the loss of Anne Donnelly on October 4, 2023

Anne Donnelly was the first of the many friends I’ve made at the Arboretum and... read more

Oct 01, 2023 | Fred Breglia, Executive Director

From the Director’s Desk: Update on the Big Tree Search

Landis Arboretum has successfully kicked off its most recent Big Tree Search, and the tree... read more

Oct 01, 2023 | Erin McKenna Breglia

From the Garden: Your Autumn Garden Must Haves!

It’s certainly been a rainy summer, but the rain has helped keep our plants green... read more

Oct 01, 2023 | Nolan Marciniec

Landis Portraits: A Series About the People Behind the Plants at the Arboretum - Chuck Mueller

Chuck Mueller Volunteering, Chuck Mueller said, “is something you have to believe in . ... read more

Oct 01, 2023 | Nolan Marciniec

Volunteers Celebrate Meeting House Renovation

Shawn Bevins, Jim Paley, Craig Blevins, Fred Breglia, and Peter Bakal On a Sunday afternoon... read more

Oct 01, 2023 | Sam McClary

Apples and Man: A Book Review

Apples and Man, by Fred Lape “Apples and Man,” written by Arboretum founder Fred Lape... read more

News Archive