NJAS Opinion: November, 2003
Troy Ettel, Director of Conservation
and Stewardship
The picturesque landscapes giving the “Garden State” its
nickname are critically threatened. Over 50 acres are lost to
development daily in New Jersey, a state ranked only 46th in
total landmass. Despite having one of the nation’s best-funded
land acquisition programs, Green Acres, New Jersey still
struggles with the reality that developers continue building on
sensitive lands.
If current population and development trends continue, New
Jersey’s state forests, parks, and related preserves will
provide the final refuges for the state’s remaining biota. Will
they adequately meet that challenge? We cannot allow natural
habitats to degrade to the point where species disappear from
them. Yet, unfortunately, they already have.
With development threats removed, the question is, “Now what
are we doing, that even ‘protected’ land is not protected?” The
answer, for all but a few well-managed natural areas, is
nothing. That is the problem. New Jersey lacks a cohesive,
integrated vision of land stewardship that will address water
quality protection and the habitat needs of threatened and
endangered species on public lands.
Loss of Ecosystem Forces
The idea that Nature is incapable of sustaining itself
without intervention by humans is troubling. The unfortunate
reality is that human civilization has deprived many natural
systems of their ability to self-regulate. Fire suppression,
river damming and channelization, ditching, diking, and draining
wetlands have suppressed restorative ecosystem processes like
flood and fire. Today, levies and dams prevent frequent,
small-scale floods, while making less frequent, massive floods
more catastrophic. Likewise, fire suppression prevents frequent,
low-intensity fires while allowing accumulation of fuel loads
leading to more massive blazes. Floods and fires of this extent
are rare in nature. Rather, they are a product of human-induced
habitat changes.
In addition to changes driven by fire and water,
historically, some wildlife species effected landscape-scale
habitat modifications. The magnitudes of habitat changes induced
by passenger pigeon roosts (covering up to 100 square miles),
bison runs (pounded by thousands of hooves), or trees felled by
nature’s clearcutter, the beaver (at pre-settlement densities)
are unknown. In part because of their abundance and skill at
habitat modification, these species interfered most with
settlement. Their populations were widely extirpated or reduced,
disrupting their roles as ecosystem architects. Like fire and
flood, the habitat disturbances instituted by these animals have
mostly disappeared from the landscape.
As forces that shape ecosystems fade away, plant and animal
species dependent upon habitat regeneration also disappear. As
habitat diminishes in extent, remnant patches become
increasingly fragmented and isolated from each other. Of the
ecosystems experiencing declines greater than 98% in eastern
North America, 5% are grasslands, shrublands, and barrens and
another 24% are shrub communities. These habitats are early
successional, meaning that in the absence of periodic
disturbance, i.e. fire, they will succeed into forested habitat.
That is not too good if you are a northern pine snake, Henslow’s
sparrow, or frosted elfin butterfly, all of which are threatened
or endangered in New Jersey and dependent on grasslands or
barrens. In fact 28.6% of all birds listed as threatened,
endangered, or special concern in New Jersey are dependent on
early successional habitats. Even if large acreages were
purchased exclusively for these species, they would still
disappear, along with their habitats, without active management.
Acquisition alone is clearly not enough for them.
Alien Assailants
Besides the elimination of natural perturbations and keystone
species, human actions have had other negative consequences on
natural habitats in the eastern United States (U.S.). Human
introductions of exotic plants and animals are severely
threatening native species. Over 42% of plants and animals
listed under the Endangered Species Act are threatened by
predation from or competition with exotic species. Exotic
species do over $138 billion of damage in the U.S. each year.
History offers many heartbreaking examples demonstrating why
these problems cannot be ignored.
The eastern forests of North America have been devastated by
exotic insects and diseases. The American chestnut was formerly
the most dominant tree and most important producer of hard mast
in the eastern U.S. Today, the species is functionally extinct
in the wild, the victim of an exotic fungus, and exists only as
sprouts from the roots of dead trees. Others have met similar
fates, or else continue to struggle. American elm succumbed to
Dutch elm disease, Frazier and balsam fir to the balsam wooly
adelgid, eastern and Carolina hemlocks are under attack from
hemlock wooly adelgid, eastern flowering dogwood is being
attacked by anthracnose, and beech bark disease is destroying
American beech. These nonnative diseases and insects were all
accidentally introduced to North America by humans. Both active
management and adequate funding are needed to apply known
treatments for some of these pathogens and to continue research
for the development of effective controls. A passive response to
exotic, plant diseases is a sad obituary for natural
ecosystems.
In addition to exotic insects and disease, nonnative plants
are causing tremendous ecosystem damage throughout the eastern
U.S. Introduced into a new continent where competitors and
natural predators are nonexistent, exotic plants can quickly
displace native vegetation and takeover ecosystems. Some of the
worst-case scenarios include purple loosestrife which is
spreading at a rate of 444 square miles per year, altering the
structure of wetlands it invades, causing over $45 million in
damage annually. Another highly invasive species in New Jersey
that has escaped into natural areas is a popular ornamental
shrub, Japanese barberry. Barberry’s popularity as a landscaping
shrub comes from its ability to form dense, nearly impenetrable
hedges. This trait gives the shrub a competitive advantage in
forested environments, allowing it to outcompete native shrubs,
herbaceous plants, and tree seedlings. Other invasive plants
causing tremendous amounts of damage to native ecosystems in New
Jersey include Japanese stiltgrass, Japanese honeysuckle, Asian
bittersweet, princess tree, and multiflora rose. These species
crowd and overtake native plants that have difficulty competing
with the aggressive interlopers.
Eating Ecosystems to Death
White-tailed deer are key accomplices to the success of
invasive plants. Although they are important components of
natural ecosystems in New Jersey, deer quickly devastate other
native wildlife and plants when they exceed the densities their
habitat can support. Throughout central New Jersey, deer
densities have exceeded this limit (see “Ghost Forest” this
issue). Impacts of elevated deer densities can be measured in
losses of native plants and other wildlife. Ground- and
shrub-nesting birds such as Kentucky warbler, worm-eating
warbler, and wood thrush are particularly susceptible to
overbrowsing by deer and typically suffer population declines or
total extirpation in areas where deer are superabundant.
Further exacerbating the problem, many native plants are
favored as browse by deer over exotic plants. Denuding areas of
native vegetation allows exotic plants to rapidly colonize and
capture sites. The impact can reach far beyond the midstory and
understory vegetation in forested situations. When trees die or
fall during storms, new tree seedlings are immediately consumed
by deer before they can exploit the newly created gap. As a
result, some forested ecosystems in New Jersey are slowly dying
and converting to habitats dominated by exotic plants.
Costs of Inaction
Human civilization has permanently altered ecosystems in New
Jersey and threatens the future integrity of natural areas.
Without sound stewardship, native plant communities on New
Jersey public lands and populations of animals associated with
them will collapse under the pressure of elevated deer densities
and exotic plant, insect, and disease invasions. New Jersey
Audubon Society (NJAS) joins other conservation organizations in
supporting the development and implementation of comprehensive
stewardship plans on public lands throughout the state to create
and maintain native habitats for New Jersey’s plants and
animals. NJAS further recognizes the harm that a passive
response to stewardship issues will cause, and supports a
proactive approach to developing solutions.
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