National Wetlands Research Center
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Invasive SpeciesInvasive plants and animals have been recognized as playing a large part in the loss of wetland and coastal habitats. Along with the projects detailed below, NWRC has been researching the impacts of exotic grasses on native plants and investigating the interactions between wild land fires and exotic invasive plants.
ResearchEcology, Management, and Control of Chinese Tallow in Coastal Prairie. NWRC scientists teamed with USFWS refuge managers to conduct prescribed burns in the rare coastal prairie communities of Texas and Louisiana to control an exotic tree species, Chinese tallow. By investigating the effects of burning on the survival and growth of these invasive species, researchers were able to show that effects of fire on Chinese tallow are size- and age-dependent, allowing refuge managers to focus their management dollars and labor effectively. An additional component of this work has been conducted in conjunction with researchers at Rice University and supported by the USEPA to look at the potential for fire to affect the initial colonization of prairie by Chinese tallow. In FY02, four publications, including a strategic plan for USGS research currently in review and three presentations, including one at the USFWS-sponsored workshop on invasive plants held at the Southern Weed Society Annual Meeting, Houston, TX, and the Symposium on Fire and Invasive Species held in conjunction with Ecological Society of America meeting in Tucson, AZ. (Dr. James B. Grace) Satellite Mapping of the Distribution of the Exotic Tree, Chinese Tallow. In a progression of four papers in FY 2002, researchers at the National Wetlands Research Center described newly developed remote sensing tools to map the localized occurrences and regional distribution of the widespread and gregarious invasive species Chinese tallow; one article was published in Photogrammetric Engineering & Remote Sensing and the other three are in review. These developments relied on newly available Hyperion sensor hyperspectral data collected from the EO1 satellite platform Although directed at mapping and monitoring tallow, remote sensing hyperspectral technologies advanced here have decreased deficiencies that are at this time preventing widespread mapping of invasive plants in the United States and internationally. Researchers expect methods developed as part of this project will provide a template for mapping and monitoring other invasive species within the native landscape in differing geographic areas. This work is the result of a proposal submitted by scientists at NWRC in response to a NASA solicitation and subsequently accepted through open competition. Funding was received in part from the NASA-USGS Earth Observing-1 Mission Instrument Performance Evaluation and Data Validation Program. (Dr. Elijah Ramsey)
Surveying the Gulf of Mexico for Invasive Aquatic Plants: Scientists at NWRC surveyed the submerged aquatic vegetation in brackish waters along the Gulf of Mexico Coast from Anclote Key, just north of Tampa Bay, FL, to Laguna Atascosa National Wildlife Refuge, just north of Brownsville, TX. They found exotic invasives such as water hyacinth, hydrilla, and Myriophyllum in sites with salinities less than 1.0 parts per thousand but did not find exotics in either brackish or marine systems. (Dr. Jacoby Carter) Interactions Between the Invasive Chinese Tallow and Migratory Birds. NWRC scientists teamed with USFWS refuge managers to determine the role birds play in the dispersal Chinese tallow. Researchers will also explore the value of tallow fruit to wintering birds. The USFWS refuge managers spend an increasing amount of time and money restoring coastal landscapes invaded by this species. This research combines field sampling of birds in tallow woodlands vs. native forests, laboratory analyses on nutritional aspects of tallow fruit and coexisting native fruits, and aviary experiments that will determine the ability of birds to metabolize the waxy fruit of Chinese tallow. Effects of differential avian use between habitat types may include changes in local bird communities, and differing tallow tree demographics and invasion patterns. In FY02, scientists produced two publications and provided two presentations on this topic. (Dr. Wylie Barrow) Quantifying the Rate and Extent of Invasion of Chinese Tallow and Its Displacement of Native Plant Species. Researchers are working in the Barataria Unit ecosystems of Jean Lafitte National Historic Park and Preserve, LA, to establish a monitoring network of permanent plots that can be used to assess the rate and fate of tallow invasion on native habitats and tree species. They are also developing an individual-based forest simulation model of bottomland hardwood systems of the Mississippi River delta with and without control measures for the spread of Chinese tallow and to determine the role that rising sea level and surface water control will play in its future spread and eradication. (Dr. Tom Doyle)
Ecology of Purple Loosestrife. An NWRC scientist is building a team of researchers
to study the growth, establishment, and genetic variation of purple loosestrife
across latitudes in Eurasia and central North America. Their studies will
focus on determining if the environmental factors that restrict distribution
of purple loosestrife in Eurasia can also be used to control the species in
North America. Furthermore, it is thought that the North American purple loosestrife
may be a “superspecies” in the sense that it may have introgressed
genes from closely related native species, so grant proposals have been submitted
to study this possibility.(Dr. Beth Middleton) Return to Forest Ecology Branch |