Native & Nativar Plants

 

Benefits:

  • Helps Wildlife
  • Conserves Water
  • Low Maintenance
  • No Fertilizers, Pesticides or Herbicides Required

Native & Nativar Plants 511 to 540 of 624 total

  • June Pink Rhododendron Covered in Blooms
    Sold Out
    Growing Zones: 5 to 8

    June Pink Rhododendron

    $60.99
  • Appalachian Barren Strawberry Geum Blooming
    Sold Out

    (1)

    Growing Zones: 3 to 8

    American Beauties Native Plants

    Appalachian Barren Strawberry Geum

    $38.49
  • Sunstruck False Sunflower Blooms Close Up
    Sold Out

    (2)

    Growing Zones: 4 to 8

    Sunstruck False Sunflower

    $38.49
  • Yellow Tropical Milkweed flower close up
    Sold Out

    (3)

    Growing Zones: 9 to 11

    Proven Winners

    Yellow Tropical Milkweed

    $27.99
  • Stratosphere Pink Butterfly Flower Blooms Close Up
    Sold Out
    Growing Zones: 6 to 11

    Proven Winners

    Stratosphere Pink Butterfly Flower

    $15.74
  • True Native Plant
    Common Blue Wood Aster Growing in the Garden
    Sold Out

    (1)

    Growing Zones: 3 to 8

    American Beauties Native Plants

    Common Blue Wood Aster

    $38.49
  • Squirt™ Compact Leucothoe  in Garden Planter
    Sold Out
    Growing Zones: 5 to 9

    Squirt™ Compact Leucothoe

    $64.99
  • Chocolate White Snakeroot in Pot Planter
    Sold Out
    Growing Zones: 3 to 8

    Chocolate White Snakeroot

    $49.99
  • Harvest Moon Witch Hazel in a American Beauties Native Plants Container
    Sold Out
    Growing Zones: 4 to 8

    American Beauties Native Plants

    Harvest Moon Witch Hazel

    $80.49
  • Green Spice Coral Bells Foliage
    Sold Out

    (3)

    Growing Zones: 4 to 9

    American Beauties Native Plants

    Green Spice Coral Bells

    $38.49
  • White Meadowsweet Blooms Close Up
    Sold Out
    Growing Zones: 3 to 7

    American Beauties Native Plants

    White Meadowsweet

    $73.99
  • Purpleleaf Bailey Select American Hazelnut
    Sold Out

    (3)

    Growing Zones: 4 to 9

    Purpleleaf Bailey Select American Hazelnut

    $72.99
  • True Native Plant
    Sundial Wild Lupine Flower Close Up
    Sold Out

    (1)

    Growing Zones: 3 to 8

    American Beauties Native Plants

    Sundial Wild Lupine

    $38.99
  • Black Sea Coral Bells Foliage
    Sold Out
    Growing Zones: 4 to 8

    Black Sea Coral Bells

    $35.49
  • Brodie Eastern Red Cedar Shrub Close Up
    Sold Out
    Growing Zones: 3 to 8

    American Beauties Native Plants

    Brodie Eastern Red Cedar

    $76.49
  • Dolce Appletini Coral Bells In Pot
    Sold Out

    (1)

    Growing Zones: 4 to 9

    Proven Winners

    Dolce® Appletini Coral Bells

    $29.49 - $36.99
  • Iron Butterfly Vernonia Stem with Foliage and Blooms
    Sold Out

    (1)

    Growing Zones: 4 to 8

    American Beauties Native Plants

    Iron Butterfly Vernonia

    $38.49
  • Reka Highbush Blueberry Fruit Close Up
    Sold Out
    Growing Zones: 4 to 7

    Reka Highbush Blueberry

    $73.99
  • Healthy Black Truffle Cardinal Flower
    Sold Out

    (1)

    Growing Zones: 5 to 9

    Black Truffle Cardinal Flower

    $38.49
  • True Native Plant
    Album Veronicastrum Virginicum Growing in the Garden
    Sold Out

    (1)

    Growing Zones: 3 to 8

    American Beauties Native Plants

    Culver's Root

    $38.49 - $49.99
  • Nantucket Viburnum Blooming
    Sold Out
    Growing Zones: 6 to 9

    Plants That Work

    Nantucket Viburnum

    $79.49
  • Semmes Beauty Oakleaf Hydrangea Leaves Main
    Sold Out
    Growing Zones: 5 to 9

    Semmes Beauty Oakleaf Hydrangea

    $62.49
  • Desert Eve Rose Yarrow Growing under the Sunlight
    Sold Out
    Growing Zones: 4 to 9

    Desert Eve™ Rose Yarrow

    $34.99
  • Speckled Alder Leaves and Foliage
    Sold Out
    Growing Zones: 3 to 8

    Speckled Alder

    $79.99 - $88.99
  • Healthy Dolce® Frosted Berry Coral Bells
    Sold Out
    Growing Zones: 4 to 9

    Dolce® Frosted Berry Coral Bells

    $37.49
  • Milkmaid Tropical Milkweed flower and leaves
    Sold Out

    (1)

    Growing Zones: 3 to 9

    Proven Winners

    Milkmaid Tropical Milkweed

    $28.49
  • Free Shipping
    Christmas Wintergreen - White Birch Decorative Pot
    Sold Out

    (1)

    Growing Zones: 3 to 7

    Christmas Wintergreen - White Birch Decorative Pot

    $44.99
  • True Native Plant
    Healthy Staghorn Sumac
    Sold Out
    Growing Zones: 3 to 8

    American Beauties Native Plants

    Staghorn Sumac

    $89.99
  • True Native Plant
    Goat's Rue Flowering
    Sold Out
    Growing Zones: 3 to 9

    Goat's Rue

    $35.99
  • Thundercloud Sedum Flowering
    Sold Out
    Growing Zones: 4 to 8

    Thundercloud Sedum

    $38.49
Native & Nativar Plants 511 to 540 of 624 total

What Is a Native Plant?

Throughout this website and many other gardening resources, you'll see references to native plants. It’s fairly easy to decipher the meaning of native, but let’s delve into what native means in gardening and why it’s increasingly important to choose native plants, especially where saving water is a concern.

Although the concept should be simple, you might find conflicting information about whether a particular plant you like is considered native. So I’d like to first briefly define the term. A native plant grows naturally in a particular region or location. Easy enough, but you can move a plant to a region at some point in time, and wait for it to adapt. Once it does, it’s still no more native to the region.

For a plant to be native, humans have not intervened in its setting down roots. So a plant native to New Mexico has been there long before any gardener thought it might look great against a rock. And along the East coast, native plants were in place before the Europeans arrived on ships and began settling and farming. People also have not intervened or altered the plants; the plants have evolved to local conditions on their own over many plant generations. So the two main qualifiers are no people involvement and geography.

Why Aren’t All Plants Native?

Maybe to understand why you don’t walk down the sidewalk and see blocks of native plants, you have to grasp the concept and history of introduced and invasive plants. Introduced, or non-native, plants are brought by people to a location other than their native one. Not all non-native plants cause problems and become invasive, but they might be harder to grow, require more water, etc. And they can be introduced accidentally or brought intentionally.

An invasive plant, on the other hand, is a non-native brought to a new area that spreads and establishes itself rapidly and soon disrupts local ecosystems. An example in New Mexico is salt cedar. The salt cedar tree was introduced here and is sucking up water along streams and river banks, damaging important native trees such as cottonwoods. Most of the worst weeds we deal with in the Southwest first came here as ornamental plants.

Why Are Native Plants Important?

As opposed to invasive plants, native plants are balanced with and support local ecosystems. They don’t take all of the water that other plants and animals need to survive. They offer cover and food for animals and have adapted to typical climate and soil environments. If you think about it, a plant that survives at 9,000 feet and 120 miles from the nearest population center needs no help from people to make it through the cold winter or the hot summer. That plant should need little help from a gardener who lives nearby and in the same zone.

It’s important to preserve native plants and important to include them in garden plans. When you select plants native to your area, you support the birds and critters that also roam your neighborhood or nearby wilderness areas, use less water and make gardening easier on yourself. Your plants will stay healthier because they already know what to expect! Look for help selecting native plants from local master gardener groups, native plant societies, and coop extension services. We will also mark any plants as native whenever possible as well in each plant's description.