By Beth Sullivan
This has been a spectacular year for
plants. The wet spring encouraged lush, vigorous growth. It would
seem that all things are rejoicing at the end of the drought and
adding life giving extra foliage to every branch and stem. We are
also learning that most plants benefit from the rising levels of
carbon dioxide in our atmosphere, which also encourages plants to
photosynthesize more, adding more growth. I guess that is a good way
to try and balance the CO2. However, we are also being told that
vines, in particular, seem to respond most robustly to these growing
conditions. Sadly, it appears that the non-natives are more efficient
even still. It seems that right in front of our eyes, no time lapse
needed, invasive vines are beginning to dominate: the woods, the
trails, structures, native plants, and even each other. One native
also enjoying the growth spurt is Poison Ivy, which seems to be the
happiest of growers. It seems to be thriving better, growing larger
and also seems to be more irritating.
Poison Ivy is a native that is behaving aggressively under ideal growing conditions. |
Take a walk on one of several of our
most beloved preserves, the ones with variable habitats, with fields,
and open sunny patches along the trails and beautiful stone walls.
These offer the most extensive look at how the invasives have altered
the landscape. The Knox Preserve is a best (or worst) case example.
Walking down the trails along the
field, and into the shrub land area, and along the shore, the variety
of invasives is educational and daunting. Vines can be woody and
persistent, growing bigger each year, such as Oriental Bittersweet
which can entangle and strangle, and the monster Porcelain Berry that
covers and smothers entire trees.
Oriental Bittersweet vines twist their way up and then strangle the supporting tree. |
Porcelain Berry is a beauty of a beast that will cover and smother entire trees and walls. |
Another invasive vine that has
become a true problem for us is Black Swallowwort. The vines are
delicate in appearance; they do not survive the winter. But
underground their roots form a very dense, impenetrable mass. They
are impossible to pull out successfully, and once established they
form huge colonies, and other plants cannot get a foothold into the
ground where the roots take over everything. The pods, which are
visible now, look like slim, hanging milkweed pods. It is the
similarity to milkweed that makes this plant especially loathsome.
Monarch butterflies are somehow attracted to this plant and will
deposit their eggs on the leaves. However their caterpillars cannot
survive on them. Monarchs are having enough trouble in their
life-cycles; they don’t need an added villain decimating their
numbers.
If you find Swallowwort, at least remove the pods to prevent seeding |
Other invasives are woody shrubs,
like Multiflora Rose, Winged Euonymus (Burning bush), Japanese
Barberry and Honeysuckle, or small trees like Glossy Buckthorn and
Autumn Olive. Each of these plants might seem to offer some
positives for wildlife: Multiflora Rose provides nesting places and
habitat. Honeysuckle and Buckthorn offer appealing berries. Once
again, there are hidden dangers. Birds rely on native berries for
their nutrients for all aspects of growth and development. In a
recent study, it was found that birds who took a greater proportion
of their diet from non-native berries may get filled up, but the
nutrients are not adequate to fill their essential needs-like “fast
food” for birds. Birds that ate too many Honeysuckle berries had
poorer feather development, poorer colors, and those colors act as
attractants to females, as indicators of good health and vigor.
These are just a few. There is
Japanese Knot weed, Spotted Knapweed, Mugwort and large Thistles.
There are invasive grasses like Japanese Stilt Grass and Reed Canary
Grass that take over and ruin grassland habitats. And there are
flowers that have been planted in our gardens, like Lesser Celandine
and Garlic Mustard, that have now run rampant, excluding other
plants with the strength of their growth and even harmful chemistry.
The list is, sadly, way too long.
Check out the CT Invasive Plant
Working Group web site here. The working group is a consortium of
individuals, organizations, and agencies concerned with invasive
plant issues. The website is quite an education. Their plant list is here.
Take some time to look around your yard and woodlot. This is the time
now to identify them most easily. Then pull, cut, treat and remove as
many as you can before they spread. Don’t let those berries be
eaten; don’t let the seeds blow. Dispose of plants in your trash,
and do not put into yard waste containers that will be sent to
compost.
We have introduced these plants to our native habitats. They
threaten native plants and are detrimental to native pollinators,
birds, and other animals. I believe it is our responsibility to try
and control them the best we can.
Photographs by Beth Sullivan.
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