How ‘re-wilding’ can make Canada’s cityscapes more climate resilient and bee friendly
TORONTO — The laneway beside Adam Barnes’s house is, at first blush, unremarkable within Toronto’s catalogue of backstreets: there are garages, a graffiti-tagged brick wall and a chain-link fence topped with barbed wire.
The curb used to be dominated by tree-of-heaven, an invasive plant that can quickly outcompete native species, says Barnes. But when the pandemic turned the laneway into a refuge of outdoor play for Barnes and his daughter, they wondered what other life might grow here too.
Along this concrete stretch, Barnes has helped to recover a number of native plants. Bees, butterflies and other pollinators — pushed to the brink by compounding extinction pressures — now seek out the laneway’s abundance.
Extending between the barbed wire, a towering stalk of a cup plant can serve as overwintering insect habitat. Come summer, its daisy-like flower will attract bees and butterflies, and its cup-shaped leaves will act as nature’s water cooler. In the fall, goldfinches will feed on its seed.

