Sustainable Roots Ecological Restoration
Sustainable Roots Ecological Restoration Inc. was born from a desire to see positive change in the way that we view urban ecological restoration.
We are a service dedicated to restoration through invasive species management, reforestation, and education.
05/29/2026
Catch us at tomorrow from 9-1 🦋
We will have a variety of native plants ready for your pollinator garden 🪴
We love this Toronto market so much! So many great vendors and always a lovely time 💚
05/28/2026
We love checking back in on past gardens 🌿
This amazing rooftop pollinator garden was installed last spring with the help of the beautiful and easy to put together raised beds from our friends at 💚
It’s always wonderful to bring some nature into the city 🦋
Swipe through to see the progress of this garden 🌸
05/11/2026
First garden of the season! 🤙🌷
Some process pics and before & afters from last week’s garden 🪴
Though it’s too early in the season to see much from most of the plants, we still had some eye candy from the trilliums and prairie smoke 🌸😍
05/10/2026
Peak trillium season ft. Newt 🌱🌸
05/09/2026
A very nice spring bloom from a rainy hike here in this past week 💚
Meet Cutleaf Toothwort — one of Ontario’s beautiful spring woodland wildflowers 🌿
This native perennial emerges early in the season, before the forest canopy fully leafs out, producing delicate white four-petaled flowers above deeply cut leaves. As a spring ephemeral, it takes advantage of the brief window of sunlight that reaches the forest floor in early spring.
But cutleaf toothwort is more than just beautiful — it plays an important ecological role in Ontario forests.
It is a host plant for the West Virginia White, a native woodland butterfly found in parts of southern Ontario. The butterfly lays its eggs on toothwort species, and the caterpillars rely on these plants to survive.
Unfortunately, invasive Garlic Mustard has become a major threat. Because garlic mustard is in the same plant family, the butterflies can mistake it for native toothwort and lay their eggs on it instead. The problem? The caterpillars often cannot survive on garlic mustard, creating what ecologists call an “ecological trap.”
Protecting native woodland plants like cutleaf toothwort — and removing invasive species like garlic mustard — helps support the complex relationships that healthy forest ecosystems depend on 🍃
05/06/2026
And just like that, the bloodroot has finished it’s show! 🍃
Early spring is so magical and so fleeting 🤍
05/05/2026
Catching the last few glimpses of bloodroot for the season 🤍🩸
05/04/2026
Even the hardest workers need to pause 🌳
Andy taking a well-earned break in the middle of a busy planting season. Long days, big sites, and a lot of trees going into the ground to help grow healthier, more resilient communities.
A quick recharge… then it’s back to it 💪🌱
04/28/2026
A very nice spring trio 🤍🌿🌼
04/24/2026
Our team has been hard at work this month—on track to plant 11,000 trees right here in Markham 🌳
Yesterday, they hit a new single-day record and absolutely crushed it 🙌
Any guesses how many trees made it into the ground in just one day?
Every tree planted is a step toward a healthier, more resilient community. Stay tuned as we keep growing 🌱
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