|

Knowledge of the multiplicity
of living creatures enables us to garden in harmony with nature
all over the globe. A plant sends its roots into the earth, and
is swayed by the wind. Turning the soil with a spade brings out
worms, centipedes, spiders, larvae, and a mass of invisible micro-organisms,
fungi and bacteria.
These creatures scurry
about in the earth looking for food. They degrade organic matter
into a form that can be assimilated by the roots of plants. Earth
worms also help aerate the soil by digging tunnels. Moles help the
gardener by eating harmful larvae.
Humans have also made fire
their ally. They use it in several parts of the world to clear land
for cultivation. South African gardeners know the role it has played
in the ecology of fynbos (maquis) in the Cape Floral Kingdom, where
heat and smoke are used to germinate the seeds of a number of rare
ornamental plants.
The flora of tropical forests,
like the ocean depths, is the final "terra Incognita"
of naturalists.
Bathyscaphes (deep-sea
research vessels) and radeaux des cimes (dirigibles for observing
the tree canopy) will continue to move through the ocean depths
and the sky for a long time before they can identify all of the
hundreds of unknown animal and plant species.
|