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Flooding Spreads Invasive Species In Vermont, Iowa, Louisiana

AP  |  By Posted: 04/29/2012 12:01 pm Updated: 04/30/2012 8:51 am

BETHEL, Vt. (AP) — Last year's hurricanes and flooding not only engulfed homes and carried away roads and bridges in hard-hit areas of the country, it dispersed aggressive invasive species as well.

In Vermont, the floodwaters from Tropical Storm Irene and work afterward to dredge rivers and remove debris spread fragments of Japanese knotweed, a plant that threatens to take over flood plains wiped clean by the August storm.

The overflowing Missouri and Mississippi rivers last year launched Asian carp into lakes and oxbows where the fish had not been seen before, from Louisiana to the Iowa Great Lakes. Flooding also increased the population along the Missouri River of purple loosestrife, a plant that suppresses native plants and alters wetlands.

"It's quite an extensive problem around the country and it's spreading," said Dr. Linda Nelson, aquatic invasive species expert with the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. The agency's budget for controlling invasive aquatic plants has grown from $124 million in 2008 to $135 million for fiscal year 2012.

Dr. Al Cofrancesco, director of the Corps' Invasive Species Center in Vicksburg, Miss., said invasive species are not a problem when they're in their native range.

"There are things that keep them in natural balance. The problem occurs is when we move into areas where they don't have those natural controls or regulators and they expand very rapidly," he said.

In Vermont, floodwaters and repair work broke off portions of stems and woody rhizomes of the aggressive Japanese knotweed. The perennial, imported from Asia as an ornamental, was already a problem in Vermont and a dozen other states in the Northeast, the Pacific Northwest and the Midwest. It spreads quickly on riverbanks, floodplains and roadsides, choking out native plants, degrading habitats of fish, birds and insects and weakening stream banks

"The whole Irene event was ideal" for knotweed, said Brian Colleran, a coordinator for Vermont's knotweed program.

The plant, which resembles bamboo when mature, spreads quickly in disturbed soils. Just this week, new young plants were inching out of the silt on the banks of the Camp Brook, a tributary of the White River, where the land looks like a moonscape since floodwaters washed away trees, rocks and other native plants. Once these invasive plants take over, their root structure and a lack of groundcover and native plants and trees with deeper roots, weakens the stream banks, causing erosion, and flood damage.

"We'd like to get out the message that if there's ever a time to hand pull or mechanically control so we can avoid the use of herbicides, this is the one year where that's possible," said Sharon Plumb, invasive species coordinator, for the Vermont Chapter of The Nature Conservancy.

Once the knotweed becomes established, it's laborious to remove. The plant, which can grow 12 feet high, needs to be cut down four to five times a year for a number of years or chemicals or machinery will need to be used.

Efforts are under way to restore those bare banks with native trees and shrubs that will shade out knotweed.

This spring, the state of Vermont hired Colleran to scout out new infestations, educate river groups about the invader and to coordinate community efforts to remove the plants.

Another invasive species problem, Asian carp, was aggravated by the past year's flooding, which moved the fish from the Missouri and Mississippi rivers into isolated lakes and oxbows, said Duane Chapman, research fish biologist with the U.S. Geological Survey based in Columbia, Mo. Some carp were able to pass over dams during the floods, he said.

"Give these guys an opportunity and they'll take it," he said.

Invasives are also spread by repair and cleanup work after storms.

After Hurricane Katrina, Louisiana imposed a quarantine in a dozen parishes to restrict movement of wood and cellulose material that could be infested with Formosan subterranean termites. Millions of tons of wood debris left behind by Katrina and Rita was shredded into mulch and there were fears the material could spread the pests.

"Any time you move a potentially infested material, there's the potential to move an invasive species," said Alan Lax, the former research leader for the Formosan subterranean research unit for the U.S. Department of Agriculture.

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BETHEL, Vt. (AP) — Last year's hurricanes and flooding not only engulfed homes and carried away roads and bridges in hard-hit areas of the country, it dispersed aggressive invasive species as well. ...
BETHEL, Vt. (AP) — Last year's hurricanes and flooding not only engulfed homes and carried away roads and bridges in hard-hit areas of the country, it dispersed aggressive invasive species as well. ...
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07:15 AM on 05/02/2012
A particularly successive invasive species is the starling, which now lives (I think) in all fifty states of the U.S. As the story goes, it was intentionally introduced in Manhattan's Central Park by a 19th-century Shakespeare fan who wanted to bring over all the European species mentioned in Shakespeare.
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justaparr8head
11:38 PM on 04/30/2012
After Wilma hit us in Palm Beach County, the weeds were horrible. Hand picked out for a few years and now, six yrs later, I hope not to have to use herbicide...just pick by hand and pray for no hurricanes to re-spread :-)
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Reno Fickler
Head Lifeguard/Dead Sea Marina
07:39 PM on 04/30/2012
In the 1970s there was a particularly nasty form of 'thistle' (the name escapes me right now) that threatened farms in Nebraska. It grew incredibly fast, thorny, and had a large purple flower.
We had to carefully dig it up, roots and all, and without scattering the seed bring it back and completely destroy it. Lots of work better spent growing food. Things like that get way out of hand quickly and require immediate attention.
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ErnestineBass
No longer a cog in The Machine.
10:31 PM on 04/30/2012
Sounds like the Scottish Thistle. And you're right....thanks to a tough and overly deep tap root, it's a major pain to eradicate.
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Reno Fickler
Head Lifeguard/Dead Sea Marina
10:45 AM on 05/01/2012
I remember a name akin to "something thorn thistle". Any rural NE person could instantly identify it, you'd just have to leave out the cuss words. Your description was correct and indicated some prior encounters with the plant. Not-so-lucky-you.
06:12 PM on 04/30/2012
I love it that many environmentalists are in fact opposed to evolution. They, like the creationists, tend to think that whatever species exist now, they all must remain. No extinctions allowed! But this also implies that they implicitly believe without thinking about it that no new species should be created.

But evolution requires continual adaptation and thus a continual process of species rising or fading in prominence.

Global cultural changes are part of the overall major changes the earth has never been exempt from, whether ice age, flood, meteor strike, or human migration and commerce.
07:43 PM on 04/30/2012
Creating new species & adaptation aren't what we're talking about here, though. The problem is that humans have brought plant & animal species from other continents, where they probably have natural enemies, to a place where nothing stands in the way of their potential decimation of native species. This has happened in the Hawaiian Islands with the introduced mongoose - intended to control the introduced rats, but instead they prey on native birds - & in several places with the domestic cat, pig, & other animals which wreaked havoc on native species where they were introduced.

Where there is a natural migration of native species to an adjacent area, such as the barred owl moving into spotted owl habitat & even interbreeding with them, evolution & adaptation are the correct terms & this is acceptable (IMO), but species from Asia which were artificially introduced to the US are indeed invasive, & warrant removal.
12:02 AM on 05/01/2012
I do not disagree with your points. I am in favor of enlightened conservation.

It would probably be correct to say that I took the thrust of the article and redirected into a related pet peeve of mine.
09:20 PM on 04/30/2012
Perhaps you should visit Georgia and take a look at the problems caused by kudzu vines. It's an invasive plant brought to the U.S. from Japan. Farmers were encouraged to grow it to control erosion and feed cows. Trouble is cows hate the stuff and it grows up to two feet a day. It strangles everything in it's path and cost huge amounts of money to control.
12:02 AM on 05/01/2012
Again, agreed. Enlightened conservation is good. Just not crazy extremes to "try to protect the status quo at all costs."
06:01 PM on 04/30/2012
there is a lake in marysville calif. that has to be drained every few yrs because of a non-native lilly that grows there. apparently, even draining the lake and clearing it doesnt help because it just keeps coming back. i wonder if theres any "natural" way to control the growth of non-native species in the east coast? without affecting the native stuff
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02:46 PM on 04/30/2012
Genetically manipulated products do escape into nature and can cause havoc even nano particles get into your bloodstream altering your DNA its all a trap get into your own detox solution my celibatic heavy passion is one way proven theory works miracles.
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psandysdad
The older you get, the more excuses you have.
02:18 PM on 04/30/2012
"Introduced as an ornamental"..... one would think humanity would know better, having seen the rabbit in Australia and Kudzu in the American south.....

Here in NE Ohio we have the Ailanthus tree. I believe it is a problem in a lot of cities, also in other states, though.....

Some mastermind(s), decades ago, decided to import this Asian tree as food to start up a silkworm industry. The industry never came about, but the famous 'weed tree' is everywhere.

The wood is worthless. It breaks easy in a windstorm. It floats scads of little fluffy-white cottony looking seeds this time of year. It grows aggressively fast even in poor soils. It crowds out more desireable species. It tolerates the soot and grime of the city quite well.

But it's kind of pretty.....
06:08 PM on 04/30/2012
i think its called "the tree of heaven" or something like that. i talked to our gardener about planting it in our complex here in az, but he said absolutely NOT. then i read up on it and decided wasnt such a great idea.
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jstrate
01:29 PM on 04/30/2012
There was a time long ago (15,000 B.P) when H. sapiens was an invasive species on the N. American and then S. American continents. What about the Asian carp? Eat the carp, says Uncle Sam. Find some economic value from it, and perhaps the Japanese knotweed will be gone. Invasive species are a real down side of globalization and trade.
06:26 PM on 04/30/2012
We still are an invasive species. No people ==no pollution What other critter has destroyed as much as humans?? WE just don*t like competition
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ErnestineBass
No longer a cog in The Machine.
10:35 PM on 04/30/2012
Bingo.
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swanderman
self unemployed
12:33 PM on 04/30/2012
I live on a relatively small island in the Philippines & our biggest problem with invasive species is the common house cat. People do not spay or neuter here, they can't afford it. They also let their "house cat" out of the house. Cats have no natural enemies here & their impact on our natural species, especially the birds is devastating. Gecko lizards is another of their favorite prey & of course the result is no geckos = more insects, no more frogs or toads either. Their impact has also affected our indigenous monkeys as the cats have eliminated their food source.
Rarely do we see the shy little black monkeys who once scavenged our shorelines for fish, lizard & crab. We started killing the cats with pellet guns & cat lovers threatened to kill us. So we set up a Capture, Neuter, Release program that was a total failure. The released cats still killed our wildlife. The "no kill" sanctuary for strays soon became so overrun with cats that they had to turn them loose in the wild again. We have since found that the only solution is bait laced with Paracetomol. It kills them very quickly & doesn't seem to have any negative effect on any other species who accidently have ingested it.
09:24 PM on 04/30/2012
Sad to hear but true.
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ErnestineBass
No longer a cog in The Machine.
10:39 PM on 04/30/2012
You could always export cat meat to VietNam. Just a suggestion.
12:01 PM on 04/30/2012
Its a natural process. How many "invasive species" have been passed along through floods, birds, etc., etc., in all of history??? More than we know.
11:46 AM on 04/30/2012
Zebra Mussels are also invading Iowa lakes. They are bad because they form clusters and the shell's sharp edges are cutting the feet of people who swim or walk the beaches. Gone forever are the days when lakes and streams were clean and safe. I remember the days you could see the bottom of the lake of at least a 3 ft. depth. Too much invasion by the Human Species has caused the demise.
07:47 PM on 04/30/2012
Zebra mussels also filter out all foods from the water, resulting in the death of native shellfish & other species. Cutting people's feet might not be good, but it's the least of our worries regarding this invader...
11:14 AM on 04/30/2012
Has the GOP blamed Prez Obama for this yet?!?!
12:01 PM on 04/30/2012
No, because its all your fault.
06:10 PM on 04/30/2012
dont worry, thats coming im sure.
11:08 AM on 04/30/2012
Japanese Knotweed may be invasive, but it is VERY EDIBLE!!! Used in place of rhubarb or lemon, the jointed areas are very tart and will go well in a fish dish, dessert, or get creative with some vegan dishes. The leaves are edible as greens, wilted or raw. They have a GREAT number of nutrients! Having money problems this summer? Go forage around for some Knotweed and cook up a healthy feast for free!
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ErnestineBass
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10:41 PM on 04/30/2012
Cool. Free organic food. Thanks!
11:03 AM on 04/30/2012
How do you tell the difference between evolution and "invasive species"??!!
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Claudio Vazquez
Mountaineering - that's a real sport.
11:38 AM on 04/30/2012
"Invasive species" refers to exotic species introduced by man into an environment where they are able to outperform native species to the detriment of the local ecosystem... pretty much the same way "pollution" is different from "evolution".

If your question meant to ask: aren't all species native to somewhere, and not considered "invasive" in that "somewhere"? You would be correct.
12:21 PM on 04/30/2012
So, by you definitions these aren't really invasive species, as nature (hurricane, floods, etc.) did the introduction into the environment.
To me this shows man controlling his environment and bucking the natural order of things (ie: who would care if man didn't live there?).
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pops1959
11:02 AM on 04/30/2012
Here in Florida we have plenty of invasive species.... pythons, brazilian pepper trees, republicans.....
12:02 PM on 04/30/2012
You....and your political comments.....
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ErnestineBass
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10:42 PM on 04/30/2012
LMAO