Our process is at the intersection of design, planning,
science, outreach and education.


LANDSCAPE
BIODIVERSITY design

We create functionally diverse and ecologically resilient landscapes for campuses, conservation properties, farms, municipal parks, largescale solar arrays, residential sites and regional organizations. Our designs are crafted to meet and exceed the client’s goals, be it land stewardship, climate change resilience, strengthening biodiversity, improving crop pollination, or enhancing aesthetics through native plant communities.

Plant selection is critical to the success of our designed habitat features. Through robust ecological site analysis, we determine the ideal native plant composition to maximize the landscape’s existing features and potential for attracting and sustaining a diversity of wildlife. We bring over two decades of research on the pollen, nectar and nesting preferences of native pollinators to all of our work. Our plant recommendations support species richness across functional traits, trophic levels and animal groups (bee, butterfly, moth, bird). Science informs the design process, plant selection and measures the results.


Land use + NATURAL
RESOURCES PLANNING

Strategies for regional biodiversity and resiliency can take on a number of forms and be executed on a number of scales:

 

pollinator corridorS + Action Plans

We guide the planning process for pollinator habitat implementation by prioritizing parcels and strategies based on a range of criteria including:

  • Land use (present and historic)

  • Habitat value

  • Vegetative cover

  • Pollinator species records (present and historic)

  • Development projections

  • Visibility and cultural value

  • Cost and ease of maintenance

Download Lincoln Pollinator Action Plan: Planting for Biodiversity and Climate Resilience and order hard copies here.

Download Great Barrington Pollinator Action Plan: Connecting Habitat and Community and order hard copies here.


watershed-based resiliency plans

To truly have an impact regionally and strengthen ecological integrity across signifcant land areas, it is important for private landowners, conservation organizations and municipal entities to work collaboratively across geographic boundaries. Watersheds provide a natural structure for such collaborations.

Download A Framework for Resilience: Responding to Climate Change in the Deerfield River Watershed.


Toolkits

To ensure projects are successful and replicable across different sites and scales, we work closely with stakeholders to develop customized toolkits for pollinator habitat implementation. Toolkits can be designed to communicate with specific audiences (landscape professionals, farmers, residential homeowners), be easily reproducible and may include:

  • Plant and seed recommendations (including where to source)

  • Site-specific planting designs

  • Diagrams and other visual materials

  • Landscape management guidelines and pollinator-friendly BMPs (implementation instructions, maintenance and mowing schedules)

  • Pollinator species surveys over a 2-3 year period

Download Farming for Biodiversity on Island Grown Farm

Download Green Corridor Pollinator Toolkit: Garden, Lawn, Meadow, Woodland, Wetland.

Download Pollinate Western Mass: Replicable and Scalable Landscape Design Toolkits.

Download McKeon Farm Meadows and Hedgerows.

Download Egremont Pollinator Pathway: Toolkit for Habitat Creation and Connectivity.


SOLAR POLLINATOR
HABITAT

pollinator habitat ESTABLISHMENT + MAINTENANCE PLANS

We provide all the tools necessary to successfully establish and maintain pollinator habitat on solar sites:

  • Site analysis/mapping existing conditions

  • Baseline inventories of natural communities, vegetation and pollinator species on site

  • Landscape design for pollinator habitat below and around solar arrays

  • Establishment and maintenance plans

  • Recommendations for seed mixes and plants to promote the widest possible functional diversity

  • Strategies for control of invasive species and vegetation management activities for the first 3-5 years

  • Pollinator species monitoring over the course of the project

We ensure projects meet the necessary pollinator-friendly criteria for states such as Vermont, Massachusetts, Maryland, New York and Minnesota, where guidelines are required or incentivized. We can easily customize to meet your goals. For example, in Massachusetts, the UMass pollinator-friendly criteria includes several levels (certified, silver, gold, or platinum).

Our establishment and maintenance plans include:

  • Seed mix and seeding rate (lbs/acre) for both Array and Perimeter, specific to site conditions (including soil type(s), hydrology, slope, existing vegetation)

  • Plants for trim zone and vegetation screen (if present)

  • Establishment and maintenance instructions (including mowing heights and schedules, recommendations for invasive species removal, opportunities for creation of native bee nesting sites)

  • Considerations for wetlands, wet soils, priority habitat (if applicable)


FARMSCAPE HABITAT

Designing pollinator habitat on productive farmland is not just about crop pollination and food security: it’s also biodiversity, ecological strength and climate resilience. While most efforts to restore pollination systems on farms to date have focused on increasing the numbers of a few bee species based on their crop pollination abilities, rather than on the range of wild pollinator species needed for ecosystem health and resiliency, our farmscape habitat features are designed specifically to promote the widest possible functional diversity of species. This not only guarantees successful crop pollination: it also provides important nesting habitat for beneficial insects to assist in the predation of pests.

Diverse wild pollination systems are like spontaneous farms for wildlife. Just like humans, pollinators need nutrient-dense foods, shelter, and successful reproduction to thrive.

While managed bees can be expensive to rent or maintain, they are also more vulnerable to disease. Wild bee populations on farmland help to provide pollination services in years when managed bees fail.


POLLINATOR SURVEYS

We measure the success of our projects by documenting changes in pollinator species populations on sites before and after plants are installed.

species inventories before project begins

Like a classic before and after experiment, we want to know what’s living there first. We conduct surveys of pollinator species on sites to establish a “control,” as well as baseline criteria for what improvements could be made.

follow up surveys after plants established

Unlike other native landscape design projects, our designed plant communities are held to the highest standards of scientific measure. We guarantee improvements in the biodiversity of sites, and measure this by surveying for pollinator species change over the course of several years.


ECOSYSTEM STUDIES

ecological site analysis

Knowing the context and existing conditions of a site or a region is critical to making well-informed design directives. Our ecological site analysis services include:

  • Slopes + Drainage

  • Soils

  • Vegetation + Natural Communities

  • Solar Potential

  • Circulation

  • Character + Views

  • Buffers + Restrictions

  • Land Use (present and historic)

  • Habitat Value + Connectivity

  • Pollinator Species Surveys (present and historic)

  • Context + History

botanical surveys

We record existing vegetation and site conditions in order to make suggestions for plantings based on natural community observations. This saves clients money and time, by building on the strengths of a site before intervention.

aerial surveys

Using remote controlled drones equipped with video cameras, we can survey sites that are vulnerable to disturbance or normally difficult to access.


professional training

native bee identification trainings

Stakeholders of all backgrounds and levels of experience can learn how to identify bumblebee species and bee-plant relationships; obtain the skills necessary to assess the quality of their own habitat sites; and improve the biodiversity of future sites destined for habitat modification.

team building

We work with groups of stakeholders to identify goals and strategies for collaboration across sectors, land use scenarios and geographic boundaries, in order to make for successful public projects.


Bumblebee photographs from Lincoln, Massachusetts by Norm Levey