Typically small, privately owned, natural areas that are intended to complement larger, ecosystem level preserves.
What's the point?
Micro-preserves of all sizes, existing on patchworks of privately owned land, might help support and sustain organisms moving between larger ecosystem level protected areas.
Are they all the same?
Nope.
What do they have in common?
They aren't pavement and they aren't lawn grass. At the very least, they each seek to protect areas that are natural and they exist on a spectrum from pure naturalism to aggressively assisted regeneration. Sometimes including planned prairie and in the most confined of spaces... cultivated beds or containers with ecologically desirable plants.
How are they different?
A micro-preserve with a management strategy of "pure naturalism" will likely host different organisms from a preserve with a strategy of aggressive "assisted regeneration". And both of these will host different organisms than a planned prairie. All strategies are welcome in the umbrella so long as the project owner is committed to limiting pavement and sod in the area being managed as a micro-preserve.
Why group these micro-preserves under an umbrella?
There are several reasons. Here are some...
Are these natural, ecologically restored areas allowed to be pretty?
Yes. Pretty and natural are not mutually exclusive. Assisted regeneration allows for careful selection of ecologically appropriate plants that fit themselves into the ecosystem but also fit themselves into residential neighborhoods. If your assisted regeneration strategy calls for the removal of honeysuckle, you do get to decide what (if anything) to plant in its place. The more artistic among us might demonstrate how a species perceived to be graceless, might appear graceful when planted alongside plants that complement its unique growth form.
Example - One of the projects within the umbrella has found a way to make Pokeberry look beautiful when planted among other tall forbs. It is so beautiful that it is pictured prominently, framing the right side of the banner photo for their project.
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