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Dirty Dozen

Within the past few decades a new biological pollutant has reared its ugly head, threatening the health and productivity of our native ecosystems.  Organizations with names like Weed Warriors and Weed Busters have declared war against this seemingly benign enemy -- plants.  Citizen volunteers and professionals alike have armed themselves with every garden tool imaginable to literally “root out” invasions of exotic plant species.

What makes a plant an exotic species?  An exotic plant has been transplanted from its habitat of origin to another one, like when a person has moved from one culture or country to another.  Exotic species may be transplanted from other countries or from the eastern United States to the west, or vice versa.  The seeds of exotic plants disperse in all directions, even making their way into wilderness areas on the boots of hikers, on vehicle tires, or the fur of animals.

As a result of the introduction and spread of invasive species, increasing losses of wildlife food and habitat occur.  In addition, it costs billions of dollars to protect and restore natural resources threatened by invasive exotics.  The spread of invasive species has exploded over the past few decades. 


1. Kudzu

Imagine a half-mile stretch of a southern West Virginia hillside wearing a ruffled-green cloak, bumpily draped over poles of varying heights.  A successful invasion of a creeping vine called kudzu (Pueraria montana) looks eerily like this.  Forget the trellis.  This vine grows a foot a day, extending nearly 60 feet in a growing season over shrubs and trees, strangling branches and smothering foliage.  Within a few years, acres of wildlife habitat vanish. 

Kudzu was introduced to the U.S. from Asia in 1876 and promoted as a forage crop for livestock and as an ornamental plant.  Beginning in the 1930s it was promoted as a control for soil erosion.  By 1953, it was considered a weed pest or “weed gone wild.”    

Kudzu

2, Water Shield

Water shield (Brasenia schreberi) first appeared in a lake in West Virginia about 30 years ago.  This small, lovely waterlily produces rounded-purplish leaves and purple flowers.  Water shield now occurs in bodies of water across the state including Pendleton Lake in Blackwater Falls State Park.  Water shield has out competed native aquatic plants and its thick growth interferes with fishing lines and the movement of peddleboats. 

WaterShield

3. Crown Vetch

Crown vetch (Coronilla varia) was introduced from Asia in the 1950s for use as a ground cover for erosion control on roadsides and excavation sites.  This aggressive plant invades sunny habitats, climbing over small trees and ground cover and shading them out.  Rodney Bartgis, director of the Joint Central Appalachian Program of The West Virginia Nature Conservancy (WVTNC) directs a program to combat invasive exotics.  He points out that plants like crown vetch threaten several state and globally rare species on WVTNC preserves.

Crown Vetch

4. Japanese Knotweed

Japanese knotweed (Polygonum cuspidatum) entered the United States from Asia in the late 1800s and has become one of our state’s most widespread and problematic invasives.  It thrives in riparian habitats, completely covering miles of stream banks.  Patty Morrison, a biologist with the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service Ohio River Islands National Wildlife Refuge, says that Japanese knotweed dominates nearly 600 acres on the islands.

Japanese Knotweed

5. Japanese Stiltgrass

Japanese stiltgrass (Microstegium vimineum) is the plant Bartgis would place at the top of the list for threatening forest understory habitat.  Japanese stiltgrass was used as a packing material in boxes of porcelain imported from China in the early 1900s, and probably escaped into the wild as people disposed of the dried grass. It easily invades habitats that have been disturbed by roads and trails, displacing wetland and forest understory vegetation. It can completely displace hundreds of species of wildflowers and prevent the growth of tree and shrub seedlings.

Japanese Stiltgrass

6. Garlic Mustard

Garlic mustard (Alliaria petiolata) poses threats to native plants and animals in forest communities.  The two- to three-foot high plants invade the forest floor much like Japanese stiltgrass.  Garlic mustard and Japanese stiltgrass outcompete native plants by monopolizing light, moisture and nutrients.  Insects and small mammals depend directly on seeds, foliage, nectar and fruits of hundreds of species of native herbaceous plants.  Larger mammals depend on the smaller ones for food.  Consequently, just one invasive species like garlic mustard may displace a whole ecosystem.      

Garlic Mustard

7. Tree-Of-Heaven

Tree-of-heaven (Ailanthus altissima) ranks as one of the most significant threats to timberland in the state, already invading thousands of acres of forestland.  Once established, it forms impenetrable thickets and prevents native trees from growing back.

 “Tree-of-heaven produces as much as eight feet of growth in one year,” says Bill Grafton with the West Virginia University Extension Service.  

Like the famed Hydra of Greek myths, you cut a tree-of-heaven down and it sprouts multiple new “heads” from its roots.  Very few native tree species sprout new stems from their root systems.  Consequently, loggers need to avoid cutting this tree without applying a herbicidal treatment to kill the root system.  Leaving a few cut trees in a forest or near a forest edge may lead to a rapid displacement of the existing forest that was once there.   

Tree-Of-Heaven

8. Reed Canary Grass

Reed canary grass (Phalaris arundinacea) is a large, sod-forming grass that escaped from cultivated fields into wetlands across the state.  In Canaan Valley and the wetlands of many of our state wildlife management areas, reed canary grass has taken over hundreds of acres of wetland habitat.  It has very little wildlife value except for cover. 

Where it thrives, it displaces the diversity of native plants that provide food for waterfowl and serves as host plants for insects eaten by birds and other animal species.

Reed Canary Grass

9. Mile-A-Minute

Mile-a-minute weed may grow faster than tree of heaven, producing as much as ten feet of growth in a year.  This trailing vine grows over shrubs and trees blocking sunlight, severing the lifeline of sunlight to every plant under it.  Distributed mostly along the Ohio River, it poses serious problems on the Ohio River Islands National Wildlife Refuge.  It readily invades open areas such as streambanks, parks, roadsides and forest edges.

Mile-A-Minute

10. Purple Loosestrife

Purple loosestrife (Lythrum salicaria) has become the “poster child” for invasive species across the nation.  This four- to ten-foot high perennial produces beautiful spikes of rose to purplish colored flowers.  It thrives in a variety of wetland habitats, displacing the native grasses, sedges and other flowering plants beneficial to wildlife.  It has destroyed thousands of acres of wetland habitat in the U.S., but currently has a restricted range in West Virginia. Purple Loosestrife is considered a noxious weed in WV and cannot be sold here.

Purple Loosestrife

11. Multiflora Rose

Multiflora rose (Rosa multiflora) long ago surpassed the qualifications as the most problematic invasive plant species, however, its prolific spread across fields, parklands and woodlands placed it on the state’s noxious weed list.  In the early 1930s scientists promoted multiflora rose for use in erosion control and as a living fence for livestock.  Birds relish multiflora rose berries and inadvertently deposit the seeds across the state.  Multiflora rose supports fewer numbers and kinds of wildlife species because it does not provide adequate food and cover for all species.  Hundreds of thousands of dollars are spent each year trying to remove this pest plant. Multiflora Rose is a "noxious weed".

Multiflora Rose

12.Yellow Iris

Who does not love the beauty of an iris?  The elegant yellow iris (Iris pseudacoris) may be beautiful, but its escape from cultivation is anything but.  This native of Europe thrives in the open water of wetlands.  Just thirty years ago, it existed in fewer than six counties, now it may be found throughout 20 counties.  It is spreading like a hurricane through a Canaan Valley State Park bog, threatening to degrade the productivity of this habitat for wildlife, and eliminate several species of rare plant species including one of two existing populations of showy lady slipper (Cypripedium reginae).



Written by Emily Grafton, former DNR Wildyards Coordinator.

For sources of information on invasive plant control,
who can help and how to identify invasive plants call (304) 637-0245 or email:
Paul.J.Harmon@wv.gov

Yellow Iris


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