Showing posts with label best florida green roof plant. Show all posts
Showing posts with label best florida green roof plant. Show all posts

Monday, May 16, 2011

Many faces of Green Roof Gaillardia

Gaillardia was blooming in full glory on the Breaking Ground Green Roof this morning.  Check out some of the photos!  What a great Green Roof plant for dry and arid climates!

MetroVerde Green Roof Plant Gaillardia

MetroVerde Green Roof Plant Gaillardia

MetroVerde Green Roof Plant Gaillardia

MetroVerde Green Roof Plant Gaillardia

MetroVerde Green Roof Plant Gaillardia

MetroVerde Green Roof Plant Gaillardia

MetroVerde Green Roof Plant Gaillardia

Sunday, May 15, 2011

A Tale of Two Green Roof Plants - Sedum and Turkey Tangle Frogfruit

My green roof niche is hurricane systems and those plants for hurricanes and hot, dry climates.

Here is Jacksonville we were jumping for joy yesterday as we received approximately 35 - 40mm rainfall.

The rain yesterday was the first in two months. The area here has actually been officially designated as a 'Severe Drought' area by the National Weather Service.

Two green roof plants bear review under these conditions; Sedum acre and Phyla nodiflora.
Phyla nodiflora, Turkey Tangle Frog Fruit Green Roof Plant
Sedum Acre, Green Roof Plant

 The above photographs were taken two days ago.  Both plants have been established on a green roof for at least six month.  They are not recent transplants.  Both flourished earlier in the cooler temperatures.

An important note here before we proceed, even though Jacksonville may not receive much rainfall there are many afternoons this time of the year where water vapor is significant (high relative humidity) and temperatures on the green roofs are reaching for 66C (150F).  Hot dry afternoons with high relative humidity toy with us gardeners as we watch the dark, afternoon clouds build only to fizzle out without a drop of rain.

The high air humidity both hurts and helps. Helping because any water in the air is good.  Hurting because the hot wet air encourages Southern Blight Fungus and other fungi to grow and attack some of the green roof plants.

I love the name Turkey Tangle Frog Fruit (Phyla nodiflora) and Frog Fruit is a low growing groundcover plant native to the Americas, from Brazil to the Unites States.  Frog fruit is acclimated to the high humidity and hot temperatures and fungus and drought, growing well under the harsh conditions.

Sedum on the other hand is beautiful during the cooler days when the high humidity and temperatures are not around to incubate Southern Blight and the other fungal culprits.  But when those afternoon temperatures reach up into 'Hot' levels and the air water vapor content is high, Sedum may wilt as Southern Blight proliferates.

One could fill the air spraying fungicides across the roof, the chemicals drifting across the neighborhood to help keep the Sedum alive.

Sedum is not a native though.

I'm sure one day someone will genetically modify Sedum to be more like Phyla.

Phyla grows and keeps on growing despite the heat and humidity and lack of rain.

Sticking with native plants just makes sense.  Especially on green roofs.  I need to heed my own advice.

Tuesday, April 5, 2011

Intent on Using Sedum on Florida Green Roofs? Try Blue Spruce Sedum

Sedum are popular across the world to use as green roof plants.  This is because of their ability to withstand temperature variations as well being drought tolerant.

Blue Spruce Sedum on a Green Roof, Gainesville, Florida




In Florida, most do not do well.  There are a few advantages sedum brings to a green roof, including;


  • Extreme drought tolerance once established
  • Unique color and texture
  • Spread via rhizome and stem rooting, and others
There is an interesting discussion of sedum and biodiversity support found on the LivingRoofs.org website, where they encourage mixing sedum with wildflowers.  The article does state sedum may have value to bees during the early summer months.


Yet as mentioned in the blog article, Sedums for Florida Green Roofs sedum can have a difficult time in Florida - especially because of Southern Blight and other fungal diseases.



Some say Florida's issues with sedum stem from high heat and humidity.  However this is only partly true.  High heat and humidity provide a platform for the real sedum killer, Southern Blight Fungus.

Southern Blight is transmitted primarily by spores in contaminated nursery soil or plants and becomes a rampant problem during Florida's long, hot, humid summers.



Though a sterile soil mixture may be used on a green roof, the fungus may still develop across the roof via means of birds carrying debris or vegetated material from the ground below.  It is practically impossible to keep Southern Blight at bay once the hot, humid summer months arrive.

But if you are intent on trying sedums on a Florida Green Roof...try the Blue Spruce variety.



Sedum reflexum - Blue Spruce Sedum  is one of the toughest I've seen, growing in Florida.  S. reflexum can grow in the poorest nutrient containing well drained soil.  


I've seen it on non-irrigated roofs in Gainesville - and last through brutal summers of hot sun exposure.  Sedum possesses C4 photosynthesis processes, keeping the stomata closed during most of the day to avoid desiccation and evaporation of water crucial to the Calvin Cycle.  Moreover, sedum possess specialized internal vacuoles to slow down water loss when temperatures soar and the sun shines.


I've seen it thrive in well-drained soils even during the wet season.


The downside to this plant is on hot, harsh roofs it is very slow growing and produces almost no root system, making it a candidate for easy blow-off during high winds.


So it won't spread quickly and fill in your green roof here in Florida.


But it should survive the 7 H's of Florida's Green Roofing Ecology and provide a small area of interesting color and texture.


Happy Green Roofing, Kevin

Tuesday, January 4, 2011

CAM Plants for Green Roofs, Effects of Heat and of Humidity

We discussed how some cold tender CAM plants, such as many of the succulents, can be damaged by freezing temperatures.  CAM plants are called CAM plants because they possess a specific form of metabolism called Crassulacean acid metabolism.

The CAM metabolic process helps succulents and other CAM plants survive in dry, arid regions by working to keep stomata closed during the day when high temperatures and hot drying winds.  If temperatures are high, the sun is bright and stomata are open the plants can rapidly dehydrate. 


CAM plants open stomata at night when temperatures are cooler and solar radiation minimal.  When stomata are open CAM plants take in carbon dioxide (CO2) and store the CO2 in their leaf cells.  Once the sun rises and temperatures increase, CAM plants close their stomata and take the CO2 absorbed from the evening air and begin photosynthesis, producing the substances the plant requires and also oxygen, O2.

An analogy I like to use in comparing CAM plants to C3 plants is thinking about the difference between a gas guzzling 1970's sedan as compared to a new hybrid-type car with a highly efficient engine.  The C3 plants' metabolism is like the 1970's V8 gas guzzler - they both take in lots of fuel, fire up quickly, get to where they are going/growing quickly but are inefficient with respect to fuel utilization.  In the 1970's V8 wasted, unburned fuel leaves the engine as exhaust.  In the C3 plants we see volatilization and evaporation out of the leaf of photosynthesis substances through numerous opened stomata.  Yet both get where they are going/growing - quickly!

CAM plants though are like the highly efficient hybrid electric/petroleum engine.  In addition to conserving CO2 and preventing desiccation by keeping their stomata closed during the day, they are also very efficient at uptaking and using nutrients like nitrogen.  Because a CAM plant's CO2 is limited, the plants have developed mechanisms to become ultra-efficient at nutrient utilization.  Little is wasted.

Because of CAM plants adaptations to hot, arid, dry and drought-like conditions, they make great green roof plants and have been used historically across Europe as such.

Interestingly, some plants like the sedums can switch back and forth between the C3 and CAM metabolic processes depending upon the amount of water and nutrients available in the environment.  This process is called acclimation and is very similar to what we may imagine a grizzly bear's hibernation may be like.

Sedums are considerably more cold hardier than many of the other succulents that are members of the Crassulacaea family and so are popular in colder climates as green roof plants.  Some sedums are so popular for use on green roofs that they have become pest plants, exotic invasive species displacing some types of native vegetation.

Several CAM plants (Agave) surrounded by C3 plants
However, though CAM plants are excellent at surviving heat, aridity, and bright solar radiation and frost if protected, another climatic condition often is a limiting factor.  Though CAM plants, if protected can survive freezing temperatures and certainly can survive long periods of drought, many are susceptible to humidity-heat combination related issues.

Sedums and other succulents are highly prone to fungal attacks during the summer months when the temperatures range between 90 F and 100 F (35 - 37C).

The Southern Blight fungus, Sclerotium rolfsii, also known by the common names 'crown rot' and 'white mold' can decimate a well established roof of succulents or sedums.  Fortunately, southern blight does not seem to bother the succulents during cooler or dryer months.  However the everyday rainfall and resulting high air water vapor combined with high temperatures found during the summer months produce an environment just right for Sclerotium rolfsii, to proliferate.

CAM plants (Graptopetalum) with C3 and C4 Green Roof Plants
But what does all this technical information about photosynthesis and botany have to do with green roofs?

For the nature irrigated green roof, an understanding of C3, C4 and CAM plants and their advantages and disadvantages, their benefits and their limitations, is critical for a successful design.

Green Roof Succulent Injured by Southern Blight


As we continue our discussion of C3, C4 and CAM plants over the next several days we will begin to clearly see how 'Right Plant, Right Place' is important even on green roofs.

Water supplies are limited across the world.  We cannot continue to rely on irrigation use of potable water on landscapes or green roofs.

Designing a nature irrigated green roof will require utilization of a combination of C3, C4 and CAM plants, planted on the roof according to a number of biophysical variables we will discuss.

And so, to date we now understand that CAM plants are ideal for arid, hot areas and can survive drought.  We also know CAM plants may be susceptible to frost or also to fungal attacks encouraged by hot, humid weather.  We know C3 plants grow quickly.

Finally, as we discuss other important factors about plants suitable for a nature irrigated green roof we will begin to develop a sense of understanding as to the type of plant that will work long term on the green roof if planted in associations with other plants and in the right roof location.

As always, email us with questions or comments and Happy Green Roofing!  Kevin

Monday, January 3, 2011

Green Roofs and CAM Plants - Frost or Freeze Damage

We examined the damage frost can do to the mesophyll cells of C3 plants. Mesophyll cells are those cells across the surface of the leaf. C3 plants usually possess lots of stomata and C3 photosynthesis is a quick and rapid process, allowing C3 plants to grow rapidly, filling in a green roof.

In C4 and CAM plants photosynthesis occurs in a different manner with different cells. Today we will briefly examine one aspect of CAM plants and look at damage incurred by freezing temperatures.

CAM stands for Crassulacean acid metabolism. CAM plants generally have stomata adapted to open at night and not during the day, preserving water during hot periods or drought. Many plants living in arid ecosystems are CAM plants and can be recognized by smaller leaves with a higher leaf volume ratio (fat, fleshy leaves where water is stored in vacuoles), waxy leaf surfaces, sunken stomata areas.

Examples of CAM plants include;
  • Pineapple
  • Jade Plant
  • Euphorbias
  • Sansevierias
  • Aloes and others
Green Roof CAM Plant, Graptopetalum spp.

 The photo to the left is of a Mexican Ghost plant, many of us call a sedum, however it is really a not really a sedum but a Graptopetalum.

For an informative article with many reference links about CAM and Graptopetalum, see the blog post linked here.

Many succulents such as the Mexican Ghost plant and others can endure a little frost, though some of the more tropical varieties are tender to any type of frost damage.

However unlike C3 and C4 plants, many CAM plants store water in cells called vacuoles.  I call vacuoles 'smart blobs'.  Vacuoles are storage cells used for a number of plant physiological purposes.  In CAM plants vacuoles are used to store water and other photosynthesis related substances like the carbon dioxide.

Green Roof Plant, CAM Type After Hard Dreeze, Graptopetalum spp.
As mentioned, most CAM plants have thicker leaves - because of the presence of the stored water.  We have collected data over the years showing how the Mexican Ghost plant and other similar succulents survive minor frosts yet because of the expansion of water as it freezes, their cells rupture and the plant usually dies during a hard freeze.

Water stored in the vacuoles and other parts of the succulent's leaves expands as the temperature drops into the lower 20'S F (-6 to -8C).  As the stored fluid freezes and expands in size the vacuole wall and other cells rupture, injuring or killing the plants.

Though this phenomena can be observed across the green roof, it is especially prevalent in plants along the edges of the green roof.

CAM type succulents planted along green roof edges are exposed to unbroken cold, dry winds.  However within the interior of the green roof plantings we observe less freezing damage, probably due to stored heat in the planting media and the break from constant winds.

What lessons can we learn from the Mexican Ghost plant and freezing temperatures?  Many, including plant placement on a green roof and inter-relations between C3, C4 and CAM type plants.   We will discuss some of the hardier CAM plants in a future blog.

As always, feel free to email us with questions or comments & Happy Green Roofing!

Kevin

Saturday, November 6, 2010

Best Florida Green Roof Plant?

Green roofs in Florida are harsh places – remember the 7 (or more) H’s:
  1. High Humidity
  2. Hot, hot heat
  3. High desiccating winds (killer)
  4. Hurricanes (not the football team)
  5. Hard Freezes
  6. Horrible temperature swings
  7. Hurtful droughts
  8. Harmful floods
And we all are cautious about irrigating a green roof (I speak as a lawyer – not a botanist here) – our litigious society has already bred a number of legal articles on green building and tort.  Imagine – the issues of:
  • Mold
  • Water damage to interiors
  • Collapse from weight (water is heavy)
  • Bacterial breeding
  • and who knows what else…
So if we choose to acknowledge Florida’s water shortage problem and build a green roof with micro-irrigation or no irrigation at all, then we need to look to plants that:
  1. Can survive the many H’s
  2. Are visually acceptable by the community
  3. May be cost-effective
  4. Are preferably native species (or non-invasive species)
  5. Do not present a fire hazard or contribute too much dry leaf litter
  6. Are low maintenance
  7. Can survive long periods of drought
  8. Can survive twenty inch downpours
  9. Resist fungal infestations
  10. and much more
Two of the most outstanding plants that almost begin to come close to the above requirements are:
1. Frog Fruit (Lippia nodiflora), and
2. Wild Garlic (Allium canadense)
I’ll be posting more data on these two species over the next couple days.  In the meantime – what are your experiences with these species on green roofs?

Green Roof Plant Dwarfed 2 Year Old Allium Canadense


Happy green roofing!   Kevin