By Beth Sullivan
The actual growing season is coming
to an end. Plants are beginning to store their reserves for next
year, and use their last bits of energy for seed production,
ensuring a future generation.
We have different stewardship chores
at this time of year, different management strategies to maintain the
preserves as ideal (or close to it) habitats for native wildlife. As
we think of our fall work, we are assessing the problems of
non-natives and invasives-planning the best way to eradicate or keep
them in control, and do so in a way that is safe, but also efficient.
Hard to resist the beauty of the beast- Porcelainberry |
With invasives gone, beautiful wildflowers can re-establish |
Non-native is not always invasive
Non-native, in itself, is fine.
Aren't most of us more or less non-native? Many of our decorative
shrubs and flowers and fruits and vegetables are not native to our
area, but we welcome them into our gardens and they have the courtesy
to stay in check. Elsewhere, however, some non -natives have chosen
to go crazy and become invasive to the point of overwhelming our
native flora and degrading habitat. It leaves us with some hard
management questions. When we manage a preserve for ideal habitat and
promotion of native species, both plant and animal, we need to decide
how much invasion to tolerate, what the effect is on the habitat,
and how to deal with it. The use of herbicides continues to be a
sticky issue. I don’t think there is any one of us who enjoys
using chemicals of any kind, but when faced with the daunting
prospect of tons of bio-mass needing to be removed or controlled,
sometimes it becomes necessary. When we have had to resort to the
use of a chemical treatment, we do so using the best professional
guidance. The right treatment for the right plant in the right area.
We consult with DEEP and USFWS among others. Professionals are
studying the effect of certain treatments on regrowth, seed banks,
root regeneration, and species diversity and also investigating how
long a chemical remains active in the soil.
At Dodge Paddock it was absolutely
necessary to eradicate the Phragmites. After two years we have a
handle on the management, yet they persist, and we will as well. In
the meantime restoration has begun. If native plants can be
encouraged to recolonize, they may be able to fend off invaders.
Phragmites choked the wetland in 2012. |
In 2015 the area is regrowing with native plants and invites more wildlife. Photo by Jeff Callahan. |
At Knox Preserve we have spent
hundreds of hours clearing walls and removing aggressively invasive
vines and shrubs. The habitat had been badly degraded. At this time
of year, as plants start sending their sap back to the roots, it is
the best time to use a targeted spray on the leaves of invasives .
It will be transported directly to the roots, kill the plant, and the
chemical itself will degrade , usually well before the next growing
season. Again, not an easy decision. But one that needs to be made.
Each season we see great improvement. But we cannot let our guard
down.
Invasive Porcelainberry took over walls and shrubs. |
We reclaimed the walls and natives offer natural beauty. |
Start the battle at home
When we garden
in our home plots it is always easier to pull a weed, keeping an
invasion in check before it becomes overwhelming. It pays to know
your plants, know the invasives and understand the best way to
control them. Think before you purchase certain plants that may be
beautiful but invasive and still on the market: Purple Loosestrife,
“Burning Bush” Winged Euonymous, Barberry, Porcelain-berry.
Autumn Olive, Multiflora Rose and Oriental Bittersweet were once
favored ornamentals that we now fight. If you have these plants in
your yard, if you cannot eradicate them, think about pulling off
seeds and pods to prevent their spread by birds and wind.
If you find Swallowwort, remove the pods. |
An area of Swallowwart properly treated. |
We are in the season for Fall
planting; choose wisely, think native.
You can learn more about invasive
plants at the Connecticut Invasive Plant Working Group.
Photographs by Beth Sullivan, unless otherwise indicated.
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