Title: Nonnative Invasive Plants and Fire Management
1Non-native Invasive Plants and Fire Management
2What is a non-native (exotic), invasive plant?
- Non-native Yall aint from round here.
- Organisms not originally from this area, these
often were introduced intentionally or
accidentally by human activity. - (Eg. YANKEES)
- Invasive An organism which becomes established
in a forest or natural area, and is expanding on
its own, often altering native plant communities,
out-competing native species, or otherwise
affecting natural ecosystems. - ( Eg. D___ YANKEES )
3Why is this issue important?
- Plant invasions can impact natural ecosystems and
processes, land management costs, recreational
access, biodiversity, etc. - 46 of the listed TE species in the
US are imperiled in part due to
impacts of invasive species. - 3-5 Trillion lost annually due to invasive
species (not just plants) globally. - Since 1980 approximately 240 million has been
spent on invasive plant mgt. in FL over more than
2 million acres.
4Noxious WeedsThe Greatest Single Threat to
Natural Ecosystems in the West!
Diffuse Knapweed Dominated Flood Plain
5Why you should care about weed spread.
- Economics
- BLM spends 2.7 million annually to control
weeds. - Weeds reduce property values.
- Agriculture
- 1984 U.S. lost 7.4 billion in crop yield.
- Reduces forage for grazing livestock.
6Why you should care about weed spread.
- Environment - crowd out native plants.
- Cheatgrass displaced native grasses throughout
the West. - Dyers Woad and Yellow Star Thistle have ousted
natives throughout UT and CA. - Decreases soil stability and affects water
quality and quantity when fibrous roots of
natives are replaced by tap-rooted weeds.
7How do these plants get to our forests?
- Dispersal by humans
- Contaminated equipment
- Contaminated people
- Contaminated soil
- Planting in landscapes
- Dumping of landscape materials and yard waste
- Dispersal by wildlife (esp. deer birds),
cattle, water, wind, etc. - Seed rain or root sprouting from adjacent
properties
8Where are we likely to find these plants?
- Forest boundaries
- Common dumping sites
- Old home sites
- Roadways
- Disturbance areas (Timber sales, mining sites
etc.) - Firelines
WHY? Because these are the areas of greatest
human access and movement
9Impacts you may have on invasive plants
- Promotion or damage of invasive plants by fire.
- Movement of invasive plants (roots, seed, spores,
etc.) by equipment or persons. - Public education about invasive plants.
10- Cogon grass
- Offset midrib
- Serrated edges
- No branching of blades
- Long, hard scaly white root
- Fuzzy white seedhead
- Promoted by fire and disturbance.
- Spread through movement of contaminated soil
- Causes high intensity fire that may kill
overstory trees.
11Melaleuca
- Evergreen tree
- Soft, light colored bark
- Bottlebrush flowers
- Grows in dense thickets
- Promoted by fire and disturbance
- Causes high intensity, torching fires.
- Never burn before herbicide treatment.
12Brazilian pepper
- Evergreen, large shrub to tree.
- Compound leaves with distinct yellow veins
- Showy red berries in clusters often at branch
ends - Related to Poison ivy
- Fire may kill saplings but not older trees.
- May make access and movement to wildfire
difficult and dangerous
13The climbing ferns Old World and Japanese
- Twining, climbing vines
- Fertile and infertile leaflets
- Grows into tree canopies and along ground
- Reproduce with spores
- When burned, may cause long-distance spotting
and spore dispersal and torching of crowns. - May be spread by contaminated equipment and
persons
Old World climbing fern
Japanese climbing fern
14The climbing ferns
Old World climbing fern Tampa and further
south
Japanese climbing fern Primarily north Florida
15Tropical soda apple
- Lobed leaves
- Leaves and stems hairy
- Watermelon fruit, becoming yellow when ripe
- Spines on top and bottom of leaves, and stems
- Can be burned before fruit production
16Privet species
- Densely tangled brushy growth form
- Opposite leaves
- Bark gray to brown, slightly rough
- White flowers in spring
- Purple berries in fall
- Promoted by disturbance, can be managed with fire
17Musk Thistle Carduus nutans
18 Yellow Star Thistle Invades Campground!
19Knapweed spreads along roads.
20Weeds reduce crop production and forage.
Dalmation Toadflax Field
21Noxious Weeds Alter Ecosystem Processes
- Sagebrush-Cheatgrass converting to
- Squarerose Knapweed
22Noxious Weeds Increase Soil Erosion
Annual weeds lack deep roots to stabilize soils.
23Noxious Weeds Cause the Loss of Wildlife Habitat
24What can you do?
- Learn the common invasive plants in your area
- Include consideration of invasive plants in fire
planning - Make landowners/managers aware of invasive
plants on their property - Clean off equipment after exposure to easily
spread invasive plants
25Clean Your Vehicle!
Weed seeds can attach to vehicles and fall off
further down the road.
26Yellow Star Thistle
27Check and Clean Your Gear
- Weed seeds that cling to gear can be
- spread to the next site.