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How ‘re-wilding’ can make Canada’s cityscapes more climate resilient and bee friendly
Adam Barnes and volunteers have planted more than a dozen gardens, creating a one-kilometre native-plant corridor that supports bees, butterflies and monarchs.
- On April 22, 2026, Adam Barnes showcased a Toronto laneway transformed into a one-kilometre "pollinator pathway" supported by Rewilders Toronto, creating vital native plant habitat for bees and butterflies.
- More than 40 per cent of leafcutters and diggers on the continent face extinction, a 2025 study reported, driving pollinators to seek refuge in urban native plant habitats like Barnes's laneway.
- Barnes describes the project as an "opportunity for education" as native plants replace invasive species; he says "Nature is taking back over the institution" as the community effort expands.
- While Toronto requires native plants in new building landscaping, the Ontario government intends to ban such mandates under a new housing bill, despite a 2021 survey showing demand outpaced seed supply.
- Published on Earth Day, the report underscores ongoing restoration needs; Barnes noted "One day for Earth Day feels weird," emphasizing that environmental action requires sustained commitment beyond annual observances.
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22 Articles
22 Articles
'Re-wilding' can make Canada's cityscapes more climate resilient and bee friendly
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.
·Canada
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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
·Toronto, Canada
Read Full Article+17 Reposted by 17 other sources
How 're-wilding' can make Canada's cityscapes more climate resilient and bee friendly
Breaking News, Sports, Manitoba, Canada
·Winnipeg, Canada
Read Full ArticleCoverage Details
Total News Sources22
Leaning Left14Leaning Right0Center4Last UpdatedBias Distribution78% Left
Bias Distribution
- 78% of the sources lean Left
78% Left
L 78%
C 22%
Factuality
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