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2026 PPA National Symposium
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Tuesday, July 28
 

8:15am EDT

In the Center of the Great Lakes, Why Michigan’s Flora is Special
Tuesday July 28, 2026 8:15am - 9:15am EDT
Michigan is central in the Great Lakes region and stretches over broad climate and vegetation zones from Eastern Deciduous Forest to Boreal Forest. But this only tells a small part of the story of Michigan’s botanical richness. For example, although Michigan is largely forested, most native upland plants in the flora are not plants of forest understories. Many of the habitats that make Michigan and the Great Lakes region special are open, sunny habitats including dunes, Great Lakes shorelines, rock & sand Barrens, prairies, and prairie openings in open woodland. In these small areas of open habitats occur a substantial proportion of our flora, and many of our rarest plant. Most especially, Great Lakes region endemics (plants found nowhere else except the Great Lakes region), are almost entirely in these open habitats, their evolution presenting interesting problems. Another group of species again almost entirely confined to the northern Great Lakes shores, especially Lake Superior, are plants occurring as rare outliers from their continuous distribution in subarctic and arctic habitats far to the north. These are species that became stranded in special microsites, surviving in these special sites as the flora and vegetation changed around them. Conversely, in the southwest of Michigan occurred a plant community, once extensive, now almost extinct in Michigan – eastern outliers of tall grass prairie, which community especially is a source of many favorite cultivated plants.

Speakers
avatar for Dr. Tony Reznicek, PhD

Dr. Tony Reznicek, PhD

Curator Emeritus, University of Michigan Herbarium
After training in Canada (BSc University of Guelph, Ontario, PhD University of Toronto), I joined the faculty at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor in 1978 and retired to emeritus status in 2020. My research interests include sedges, especially systematics and evolution of the... Read More →
Tuesday July 28, 2026 8:15am - 9:15am EDT
Big Ten A
  Core Education
  • APLD Credits 1

9:15am EDT

Native Plants: Designing at the Intersection of Human Preferences and Ecological Integrity
Tuesday July 28, 2026 9:15am - 10:15am EDT
Landscape architect and principal of InSite Design Studio Shannan Gibb-Randall has been designing with native plants for over 28 years and has been working towards the sweet spot of design to honor both human and ecological needs. She will share her journey of many hard-won lessons and guidance so that others can engage more deeply with native plant design with success.
Speakers
avatar for Shannan Gibb-Randall, MLA, PLA

Shannan Gibb-Randall, MLA, PLA

Principal, InSite Design Studio
Shannan Gibb-Randall is principal of InSite Design Studio, a landscape architecture firm in Ann Arbor that does work primarily around the southeast Michigan region. She attended UM’s Residential College, focusing on art history and anthropology and later graduated with an MLA from... Read More →
Tuesday July 28, 2026 9:15am - 10:15am EDT
Big Ten A
  Core Education
  • APLD Credits 1

2:20pm EDT

New to Market
Tuesday July 28, 2026 2:20pm - 3:35pm EDT
Get the scoop on new introductions from the following companies:
  • Plants Nouveau, LLC
  • Walters Gardens
  • Terra Nova Nurseries Inc
  • Pacific Plug & Liner
  • Darwin Perennials
  • McHutchison
  • DeVroomen Garden Products
  • Emerald Coast Growers
  • Hortech
  • PanAmerican Seed
Sponsors
avatar for Pleasant Run Nursery

Pleasant Run Nursery

New to Market Forum Sponsor

New plant introductions and unusual containerized Woody Ornamentals, Vines, Perennials, Grasses, and Ferns are featured at Pleasant Run Nursery. Our focus is on native plants and hard-to-find solutions to site problems such as deer, shade and moist or dry sites. We are open all year... Read More →
Tuesday July 28, 2026 2:20pm - 3:35pm EDT
Big Ten A
  Core Education
  • APLD Credits 1

4:05pm EDT

Layered Landscapes: Designing with Time, Texture and Ecology in Mind
Tuesday July 28, 2026 4:05pm - 5:05pm EDT
Gardens are not static compositions — they are living systems shaped by time. This talk explores how designing with layered planting, seasonal succession and ecological awareness creates landscapes that grow richer, more resilient and more immersive each year.

Through a range of residential and experimental landscapes, we examine how matrix planting systems, multi-stem trees and carefully composed pathways establish structure while allowing dynamic plant communities to thrive. Lawns give way to biodiverse perennial layers, while microclimates are shaped through canopy, enclosure, planting density, material choices and gentle changes in level. Gravel, steel, water and terracotta interact with planting to build depth and textural contrast.

By embracing self-seeding, habitat creation and year-round interest — from winter scent to late-season seedheads — these landscapes are conceived as evolving ecological tapestries rather than fixed compositions.

 This lecture invites a shift in perspective: to see landscape as a long-term, living framework — where time, texture and ecology are fundamental to creating meaningful and enduring design.
Speakers
avatar for Stefano Marinaz

Stefano Marinaz

Owner, Stefano Marinaz Landscape Architecture
Stefano Marinaz holds degrees in Agronomy and Landscape Architecture, interned at the Royal Botanic Gardens in Kew, and worked in Arne Maynard’s studio to work on a range of private gardens in Britain, the USA and the Middle East. Since establishing Stefano Marinaz Landscape Architecture... Read More →
Tuesday July 28, 2026 4:05pm - 5:05pm EDT
Big Ten A
  Core Education
  • APLD Credits 1
 
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