Natures been showing us the benifits for years.
:agree2:
Years of a natural mulch layer being produced in forests has always shown a multitude of benefits. Nutrient availability, suppression of weed growth, moisture retention, and so on.
To continually mulch around trees especially at juvenile stages has great benefits with aiding establishment but by creating a false economy of over fertilizing and watering because of lawn areas will always have an adverse effect long term if restriction on water use or not maintaining a regime of fertilizing occurs.
pdqdl, I see in your sign off that you state you are a certified arborist, and yet you make the statement "I have always considered trees the 'apex predator' of the plant kingdom". Viewing trees in this manner sounds counter to what an arborist is or should be.
You are evidently incredibly lucky to be in the perfect environment for tree growth. And yet for some reason you are claiming it is a curse.
Perhaps where your logic is erring is latching onto the phrase "protecting the tree from the lawn". It is well documented that trees and turf compete. Where trees predominate the turf will suffer. Where the lawn is given all the care, the trees suffer. A golf course may have the most magnificient appearing turf imaginable. It is a contrived, artificial environment. If that is the appearance your clients want, you need to adjust your recommendations to achieve that. Unfortunately for the environment, that generally means pumping untold amounts of chemicals. (But that is a whole other post and rant.)
Picture a forest...sparse, native grasses.
Picture a prairie, sparse, scattered trees.
This would be the natural order of things. People unfortunately try to have everything, all at once, with no thought as to what is going to blend and coexist.
The trees and grass in your area are desperately trying to tell you that they don't want to cohabitate. If your solution to no grass under a tree is to constantly try to thin the tree or raise the crown, you are in fact fighting a losing battle. We have clients that simply will not give up their grass too close to the tree, and we tell them this is a continual battle that will require maintenance.
"Too many trees, and you won't have any lawn. Period" This sentence is true, pdqdl. But then why not go in proactively to your clients and help them select their best specimens, get rid of the "weed" trees and set up a realistic management schedule for their landscape that will minimize the use of chemicals and annoyance of running into limbs or debarking the trunks with their lawn mower?
Trees will survive without the mulch ring. They simply will survive and thrive better with it. Your client has a dead spot, bare soil under the tree...why NOT mulch it and make it look attractive?
There is much documented evidence that roots thrive better under mulch. I am surprised as a certified arborist you have not read these reports. Google Kew Gardens. After a hurricane in the 1980s that blew over a great many trees, they discovered the roots under the grass areas were significantly less than the ones under mulch areas. Every tree that can now has a mulch ring.
Sylvia
:agree2:
Years of a natural mulch layer being produced in forests has always shown a multitude of benefits. Nutrient availability, suppression of weed growth, moisture retention, and so on.
To continually mulch around trees especially at juvenile stages has great benefits with aiding establishment but by creating a false economy of over fertilizing and watering because of lawn areas will always have an adverse effect long term if restriction on water use or not maintaining a regime of fertilizing occurs.