Leaves are an important part of a healthy ecosystem. Leaving leaves in your yard:
- Improves soil and tree health.
- Supports butterflies, bees, birds and other wildlife.
- Reduces pollution, noise pollution from leaf blowers and stormwater runoff.
- Saves you time and money.
Leave Your Leaves To:
Create Fertile Soil and Healthy Trees — Leaves are full of nutrients that naturally fertilize the soil and support plant health as they decompose over 6 to 12 months. They also help control weeds. They can be composed with other brown materials, like pine straw and twigs, to provide valuable nutrients for your yard and garden.
Support Local Wildlife — Leaves support biodiversity in your neighborhood by providing shelter for pollinators, butterflies and other beneficial insects during the winter months. To make a really positive impact, leave your leaves until spring, when native bees, fireflies, butterflies and moths emerge from leaf cover. These beneficial insects support other animals and plants. A nest of small baby birds, like chickadees, requires 6,000 to 9,000 caterpillars to grow to adulthood.
Reduce Runoff and Improve Water Quality — A bed of decomposing leaves helps soak up water during heavy rains and then slowly releases water, keeping trees and other plants hydrated during droughts and reducing runoff during heavy rains. The benefits are more significant in low-lying areas prone to flooding.
Leaves blown into the street carry contaminants and nutrients into storm drains and waterways. This can cause harmful algae blooms that diminish water quality.
Avoid Pollution, Reduce Waste and Mitigate Climate Change — Leaf collection requires large trucks that burn a lot of fuel and release considerable emissions. Gas-powered leaf blowers emit nearly 300 times the amount of air pollutants as a pickup truck. Their volume also reaches 90 decibels and can cause hearing damage after two hours of exposure.
Save Time, Effort and Money — Leaves provide free fertilizer and mulch. Time and energy can be saved by leaving them in place.