It’s a grail of contemporary horticulture, a subject of inquiry for scientists and landscape designers alike: how to reinvent the estimated 40 million acres of lawn in the United States, shifting the emphasis toward native plants.
Because traditional lawn care is, at its essence, a perpetual fight against biodiversity, a war conducted with mower blades and chemicals.
All of the numbers — the gallons of water wasted, the tons of pollution generated — tell us to stop.
But what should replace all of that mowed grass?
The answer is not easy.
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