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Oregon Most Invasive Species

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Affect cost of dairy, egg and. poultry. Droppings cause stains ... Scotch broom. Benton County in 1892. Biological control agents: 3 insects released to eat ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Oregon Most Invasive Species


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Have you seen these critters?
  • Feral Pigs
  • Nutria
  • Mute Swans
  • English Ivy
  • Oriental Weatherfish
  • Gypsy moth
  • Bullfrog
  • Starlings
  • Mud Snails
  • Purple loosestrife
  • Scotchbroom

3
Feral Pigs
  • Escaped or released
  • domesticated gone wild.
  • Soil erosion reduction of
  • forest regeneration
  • Disease transmission to
  • wildlife, livestock, humans
  • Transport weed seeds

4
Nutria
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  • Invasive rodent species w/ orange teeth
  • Destroy habitat.
  • Cause erosion
  • Dont feed nutria
  • Disease and aggression

5
Mute Swans
  • Native to Europe Asia
  • Ashland in 1921
  • Deschutes River in 1940s.
  • Grew from 4 to 56 between 1985 1995
  • Pop control reduced again
  • compete w/ native birds
  • attacks on kids pets
  • challenging jet skiers

6
English Ivy
  • Fast growing, few requirements
  • Create monocultures
  • Ruin habitat for native wildlife
  • Destructive roots
  • shoot out attach to anything

7
Oriental Weatherfish
  • Popular bait fish
  • Aquarium fish
  • Still or slow moving, shallow waters
  • Burrow into mud-bottom
  • Inhabit ponds and lakes poor in oxygen
  • Can absorb atmospheric O2

8
Gypsy Moth
  • Native to Asia/Europe
  • 1869 brought over for silk
  • Lay eggs on anything
  • Love Oak, but eat many trees bushes
  • Defoliation of trees
  • Traps spraying

9
Bullfrog
  • Native to Eastern/Central US
  • Accidentally introduced during trout stockings
  • Introduced through aquarium trade and for sport
    and pest control
  • Travel 2 km to find new habitat
  • Introduced Bluegill fish eats dragonflies which
    eat Bull frog larvae.
  • Eat Western pond turtles and just about anything
    they can get into their mouth!
  • Bad for wetland diversity

10
European Starlings
  • Native to Eurasia Africa.
  • New York in 1890 by
  • Shakespeare fan
  • 140 million birds in 1994
  • Pest destructive to grains,
  • fruit crops, livestock feed
  • Affect cost of dairy, egg and
  • poultry
  • Droppings cause stains
  • damage cars stored goods
  • Noisy
  • Carry mites

11
Mud Snails
  • Native to New Zealand
  • 1/8 inch long or smaller
  • Wide tolerance in water temp
  • Live days out of water on gear
  • Reproduce by cloning, only need one
  • Population ½ mill in 1 square yard
  • Out-compete native bottom dwelling insects,
    impact fisheries.
  • Trout fishermen
  • Scrub gear with a brush, disinfectant
  • Freeze waders overnight!
  • Boil waders for 5 min. _at_ 130 F.

12
Purple Loosestrife
  • Native to Europe Africa.
  • Introduced to US as ornamental
  • Used to stabilize roadcuts.
  • Seeds survive for 80 yrs.
  • Seeds stick to everything
  • Seeds carried via runoff from roads into streams
  • Makes fields over six ft. tall.
  • Diminish habitat for grazing animals, like the
    native Elk.
  • Shade out and kill native grassland plants
  • Encroaching on farmers' crops and pasture land.

13
Scotch broom
  • Benton County in 1892.
  • Biological control agents 3 insects released to
    eat
  • Displace native plant species
  • 47 million annually in lost timber.
  • Invades disturbed sites, natural areas, dunes and
    forest lands.
  • Prolific seed producers
  • Seeds long-lived (50 yrs)
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