• Autumn is here, and the leaves in your yard might be falling to the ground.
  • If you were planning to bag up leaves this weekend, think again.
  • Here’s why experts say you might want to leave at least some of the leaves in your yard.

Autumn is upon us, and that might mean the leaves in your yard are starting to change color and fall.  

But if you were planning to add raking the yard and bagging up leaves to your weekend to-do list, think again. Experts say raking and removing leaves can be worse for your yard – and for the planet, too.  

Leaving at least some of the leaves in your yard can help fertilize your grass and other plants, provide shelter for animals and even reduce emissions from landfills. Here’s what you need to know about managing the leaves on your lawn this fall. 

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How can leaves help my yard?  

Fallen leaves can be a natural fertilizer for plants, David Mizejewski, a naturalist at the National Wildlife Federation, told USA TODAY. 

“The leaves fall around the root zone of these plants, where they do things like suppress weeds or other plants from growing that would otherwise compete with the trees and the shrubs,” he said.  

“They slowly break down and compost right there at the base of the of the tree of the shrub, right above its root zone, where they return nutrients that the plant can then recycle and reuse next spring.”

Can I mow leaves instead of raking them?

That’s a good idea. Mowing your lawn can break up leaves and bring nutrients to your grass, according to Maxim Schlossberg, an associate professor of turfgrass nutrition and soil fertility at Penn State.

“Since they’re smaller, they’re more rapidly dismantled and decomposed by microorganisms. And the whole recycling process of those nutrients being returned to the soil occurs more rapidly.”