Tuesday, January 29, 2013

That Cuddly Kitty of Yours is Deadlier than You Think


From the New York Times:

For all the adorable images of cats that play the piano, flush the toilet, mew melodiously and find their way back home over hundreds of miles, scientists have identified a shocking new truth: cats are far deadlier than anyone realized....


Full article can be found at:
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/01/30/science/that-cuddly-kitty-of-yours-is-a-killer.html?_r=0

Southern Illinois Indigenous Plant Symposium - March 16, 2013

Murphysboro, IL – The first southern Illinois Indigenous Plant Symposium will be hosted on Saturday March 16, 2013 by University of Illinois Extension Master Gardeners, SIU Carbondale- Department of Plant Biology, and Illinois Native Plant Society at the John A. Logan College Center for Business and Industry (Carterville, IL).


The goal of the symposium is to promote awareness of native plants, their use and impact on our environment. Internationally known mycologist Dr. Gregory Mueller from the Chicago Botanic Garden will be the keynote speaker, and will be joined by other environmental experts from southern Illinois. The symposium will start with guided hikes at Giant City State Park on Friday March 15, and end on Sunday with more guided hikes at Crab Orchard National Wildlife Refuge.

The event is open to everyone. The cost for the symposium of $20.00 per person includes lunch. However, space is limited and there will be no registration on site. Registration will be from February 1 to March 12, 2013. For more information on this and other UI Extension events, call 618.687.1727 or visit our website at http://web.extension.illinois.edu/fjprw/

The details for the symposium are under “Horticulture Events”, or you may pick-up a registration form at any Extension office. If you want electronic copies sent to you, contact: Sonja Lallemand at: lalleman@illinois.edu.

Monday, January 28, 2013

Southern Illinois Invasive Species Strike Team 2012 report now available online

The 2012 annual report from the Southern Illinois Invasive Species Strike Team is now available online on the River to River Cooperative Weed Management Area website HERE.

The Invasive Species Strike Team, is a collaborative effort between The Nature Conservancy, Illinois DNR, and the River to River CWMA.  The Strike Team works full time on monitoring and controlling invasive plants in Southern Illinois.






Thursday, January 24, 2013

Roundup of the Week's Invasive Species News Stories - Jan 24, 2013

We are continuing with our semi-regular series here on the ISAM Newsblog to highlight some recent news stories around the nation about invasive species.

Global plant diversity hinges on local battles against invasive species
http://www.sciencecodex.com/global_plant_diversity_hinges_on_local_battles_against_invasive_species-105553 
Science Codex
Most studies of the effects of invasive plants are done at a single scale, report the scientists in this week's issue of the journal Science.


Invasive species changing Oregon's dunes
http://www.registerguard.com/web/news/cityregion/29322318-57/forest-service-invasive-species-trails.html.csp
The Register-Guard
While sides battle over illicit OHV trails in the Oregon Dunes National Recreation Area, another major problem looms over the natural landmark. Vast expanses of open sand are being overrun, under attack from invasive plants


'Python Challenge' aims to curb Florida's invasive species
http://blogs.pjstar.com/eye/2013/01/19/monthlong-python-challenge-aims-to-curb-floridas-invasive-species/
Peoria Journal Star (blog)
Wildlife officials say more than 1,000 people signed up for the competition that began Saturday and ends Feb. 10. The state hopes the hunters will help researchers collect more information about the pythons.


Partnership battles invasive Hog Weed in St. Lawrence County waterways
http://northcountrynow.com/news/partnership-battles-invasive-hog-weed-st-lawrence-county-waterways-076649
North Country Now
A partnership dedicated to battling invasive species in the North helped contain Hog Weed and limit the spread of Water Chestnut plants in St. Lawrence County waterways in 2012.

Wednesday, January 23, 2013

Mitigating Emerald Ash Borer Impacts on the Urban Forest: Municipal Grant Program

Reposted from the Illinois CAPS Program Blog at:
http://illinoiscapsprogram.blogspot.com/2013/01/mitigating-emerald-ash-borer-impacts-on.html

The Metropolitan Mayors Caucus is offering competitive, reimbursable grants to help local government agencies sustain their urban forests by reducing impacts from the Emerald Ash Borer (EAB.) Recipients must pay for 50% of project costs through direct or in-kind contributions. Communities within the Illinois EAB quarantine zone eligible to apply.

There are 3 categories of grants available:
  1. Reforestation Grants - For planting to replace ash trees;
  2. Technical Assistance Grants - For inventory and assessment of public trees and the development of plans to manage EAB; and
  3. Wood Utilization Grants - For reclamation and utilization of wood products from felled ash trees.
 Applications are due February 1, 2013.

Application and complete Grant Guidelines available as a pdf document here
Application only (in Word) available here

Two workshops will be offered to help applicants plan competitive EAB management and reforestation projects. Municipal and state officials will discuss EAB planning and management. Grant application information and tips will be presented.

January 17, 10am – Noon
Illinois Department of Agriculture
2280 Bethany Rd., Suite B
DeKalb, IL 60115
Call 815-787-5479 for reservations and parking directions

January 22, 10am –Noon
Metropolitan Mayors Caucus
233 S. Wacker Dr., Suite 800 (Willis Tower)
Chicago, IL 60606

For reservations for the Chicago workshop or general grant program information contact

Edith Makra, Metropolitan Mayors Caucus: emakra@mayorscaucus.org or 312-201-4506

http://www.mayorscaucus.org/pages/Home/MunicipalGrantProgramMitigatingEmeraldAshBorerImpactsonTheUrbanFores.html

Tuesday, January 22, 2013

Global Plant Diversity Still Hinges on Local Battles Against Invasives, Study Suggests

Interesting article from Science Daily about impacts of invasive species are different spatial scales.  I think this article does a great job at described why study results looking at impacts vary so much.

Link to Original Article
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2013/01/130117142500.htm


Global Plant Diversity Still Hinges  on Local Battles Against Invasives, Study Suggests

Jan. 17, 2013 — In Missouri forests, dense thickets of invasive honeysuckle decrease the light available to other plants, hog the attention of pollinators, and offer nutrient-stingy berries to migrating birds. They even release toxins to make it less likely native plants will germinate near them.


Why, then, are recent popular science articles recommending a recalibration of the traditional no-tolerance attitude toward non-native species, suggesting that we've been "unfair" to invasives and should stop "persecuting" them?

Kristin Powell, a graduate student in the lab of Tiffany Knight, associate professor of biology and director of the Environmental Studies Program in Arts & Sciences, together with consulting ecologist Jon Chase, think they've located one source of misunderstanding.

Most scientific studies of the effects of invasive plants are done at a single "scale." Some studies scrutinize biodiversity in meter-square "quadrats" and others scan biodiversity in entire islands or regions.

The problem, the scientists say in the January 18 issue of Science, is that the effect of invasive plants on species richness depends on scale. Invasives decrease species richness at small but not at large scales.

The recognition that findings are scale dependent reconciles at least some dueling scientific studies. "I won't say we've resolved the debate, but I think we've made an important contribution," Knight says.

Whether it will stop journalists from interpreting a quarrel over nuance as a complete reversal of opinion is another question, given the powerful editorial attraction to man-bites-dog stories.

Probing for scale dependence

The three scientists had long suspected that studies of invasive species came to different conclusions because of scale dependence. To test this notion, they analyzed 57 previous invasive studies and confirmed a pattern: invasive plants cause a large loss in species richness at small scales, but this effect diminishes at larger scales.

To test for scale dependence in the field, they then chose three study sites from very different ecosystems across the United States, each straddling an invasion front: a hammock forest in central Florida; an oak-hickory forest in eastern Missouri; and a tropical forest on the Big Island of Hawai'i.

The hammock forest, a mix of live oak, cabbage palm, sweet gum and pignut hickory, is being invaded by the flax lily (Dianella ensifolia). Native to Africa and Asia, the lily forms dense mats on the forest floor.

Amur honeysuckle (Lonicera maackii), a mid-story shrub introduced from East Asia as an ornamental and to provide bird habitat, is the black hat in the oak-hickory forests.

The fire tree (Morella faya), a canopy tree from Macaronesia that boosts nitrogen levels in the soil, making it inhospitable to native species and more suitable for other invasives, is the troublemaker in the Hawaiian forest.

Invasives don't just sweep the board

"We counted the number of species per unit area in plots that varied in size from one meter square to 500 meters square -- a quarter the size of a football field -- on either side of the invasion front, and then plotted the number of species against the size of the plot," Powell says.

"At small scales, invaded plots had many fewer species than uninvaded plots, but they picked up species more rapidly, and at broad scales the invasives' effect on diversity virtually disappeared," Powell says.

The main reason for this "scale effect" is just probability, says Powell. "Invasives reduce the sheer number of individual plants in a plot and if there are fewer plants, you'll find fewer species," she says.

The invaded sites can catch up with uninvaded ones, Knight adds, because the number of species does not increase indefinitely.

"At any site, if you sample larger and larger areas, the number of species will eventually plateau. You can keep sampling all you want and you're not going to find any new species because you've found every species that's present in that ecosystem type," Knight says.

At an invaded site, you reach that plateau later, but you do reach it eventually.

What it means for gardeners

The research helps to explain seemingly contradictory findings in the scientific literature, but what does it mean for people who have been hacking down honeysuckle in their backyards and brushing their boots before entering conservation areas to avoid bringing in garlic mustard?

Is it worth whacking invasives or not?

"Emphatically yes," Knight says. "Invasive species are a serious threat," Knight says, "and if we're going to deal with them we need the cooperation of the public. Invasive plants have negative impacts on plant communities at smaller scales -- the scales that are crucial for necessary ecosystem services, like water management and nutrient cycling."

Take that bush honeysuckle choking Missouri's natural areas, for example. It was seeded by birds carrying honeysuckle berries from backyards. To prevent it from turning beloved nature preserves into shrub monocultures, people must remove it from their yards or choose not to plant it in the first place.

While the small scale justifies the fight, the large scale offers hope.

"Invasive plant species are reducing the abundance of native plant species, but most species are still present when we search for them at broad spatial scales. That is to say, they haven't gone extinct yet," Knight says.

"This means it is not too late to restore the habitat and increase the abundances of these native species so that they can contribute to critical ecosystem services and are less vulnerable to extinction in the future," she says.

This research was funded by National Science Foundation grant DEB 1110629.

Thursday, January 17, 2013

EAB Workshop for city officials and managers - Mt. Vernon IL


The Morton Arboretum and Southern Illinois University present

 Emerald Ash Borer
Preparedness Workshop


 Many communities in the Midwest have already experienced the destruction caused by the tiny emerald ash borer beetle. Most do not have the funds to pay for the mass quantities of dead trees it leaves behind. When anticipating the beetle’s arrival in your town, a little bit of planning goes a long way. This workshop will provide you with unique perspectives, case studies from actual communities, and resources needed to en-gage your community!



  • Date: Tuesday, February 12, 2013
  • Time: 9:00am – 2:00pm
  • Where: Veteran’s Park, 800 South 27th Street, Mt. Vernon, IL
  • Cost: $15 dollars per attendee


Limited Space Available; CEU’s available—Ask when registering!

Registration: Southern Illinois University Forestry Department 618-453-2517 or urban.forestry@siu.edu

Registration deadline is February 4, 2013.


Workshop Includes:

  • Lunch along with hands-on activities and additional take-home resources!
  • Community Stories: Lessons learned from communities that have experienced EAB. Presented by staff from the Morton Arboretum.
  •  Stakeholder Panel: The threat and management options through the eyes of city agencies.  Representatives from Carbondale, Centralia, O’Fallon, Salem, and more...
  • Increasing Community and Council Engagement: How to increase awareness and funding for  EAB within your community, presented by various city administrators, trustees, city foresters,and non-profits.
  • Latest Research: Management options, insecticide research, and more. Presented by Fredric Miller of The Morton Arboretum.
  • Applicable Resources for Any Size Community

Co-Sponsored by: Society of Municipal Arborists, Illinois Park and Recreation Association, APHIS, the Illinois