Slide 1
Champions for Biodiversity
Champions for Biodiversity
Champions for Biodiversity
Champions for Biodiversity
Slide 2
Nourishing the Web of Life
Nourishing the Web of Life
Nourishing the Web of Life
Nourishing the Web of Life
Slide 3
Bringing Youth to Nature
Bringing Youth to Nature
Bringing Youth to Nature
Bringing Youth to Nature

Many Paths To Explore

Why Native Plants?

Learn why native plants are crucial to the web of life and our future.

Add Native Plants to Your Landscape

We help you get started and show you where to purchase native plants.

The Threat of Invasive Plants

Get to know the worst invasive plants and how to control them.

Visit Native Plants in the Wild

Discover native plants in their natural habitats and learn how to identify them.

Inspire the Next Generation

Share your love of nature and nurture tomorrow’s environmental stewards.

Make Lifelong Friends

Find kindred spirits at our plant sale, garden tours, annual conference, and volunteer activities.

T-Shirts Are Here!

The 2023 Indiana Native Plant of the Year is pawpaw (Asimina triloba)

Celebrate this winner with a winning t-shirt designed by Mary Welz. It comes in several colors and shapes, and proceeds go to INPS native plant education and conservation activities.

Pawpaw, a native understory tree found in nearly every county and in every natural region of Indiana, has surprisingly showy flowers, enormous and conspicuous leaves, and delicious fruit. The foliage is the only food source for caterpillars of the Zebra Swallowtail butterfly and the Pawpaw Sphinx moth. The easily overlooked flowers attract a number of fly species with their fabulous odor, and the fruit are fed upon by a number of mammals, including raccoons, squirrels, opossum, humans, and skunks. Also known as the Indiana banana.

Order your t-shirt HERE.

Dig Deeper

Lend a Hand

INPS has volunteer activities to suit every interest and energy level, plus you meet the most interesting people!

Certify Your Native Garden

You’ve increased biodiversity and enhanced habitat by adding natives to your garden. Now show off your native garden as an example for others.

Apply for a Grant

Our Biodiversity Grant Program and Letha’s Youth Outdoors Fund support projects and activities that advance the INPS mission.

We Welcome All to INPS

INPS welcomes all people to our organization. We are all an integral part of our natural world and everyone has the right to enjoy interactions with nature and native plants.

All people need to have the opportunity to be an active part of our mission, the “preservation, study, and use of plants native to Indiana” and INPS is working to reduce barriers so that every person can safely enjoy the outdoors.

For INPS to perform its mission, it is important that it be a diverse group. INPS will take measurable actions to increase the diversity of its membership to better reflect our society.

Please let us know your thoughts and suggestions at diversity@indiananativeplants.org.

Homegrown National Park™!

Our friend Doug Tallamy has put forth this idea to compensate for the diminishing acres of natural area in the US. People have used up most of the available land to grow crops and house humans, leaving the critters who share our planet with nowhere else to go.

Why not treat our yards as part of a much larger ecosystem, says Tallamy, one that will sustain wildlife and build biodiversity?

Our Landscaping with Native team is taking up the cause. Team leader Coralie Palmer lays it all out here. Stay tuned as we synch up with Tallamy’s bold plan to engage home gardeners in restoring vibrant, productive ecosystems in their own yards.

Where to start: Read Tallamy’s book, Nature’s Best Hope: A New Approach to Conservation that Starts in Your Yard.