NJAS Opinion: Winter, 1995
Exotics (nonnative plants or animals introduced into an environment)
are a classic illustration of something being in the wrong place
at the wrong time. We are familiar with the effects of exotic
introductions in New Jersey. The chestnut blight in 1904 wiped
out the American chestnut and changed the composition of our hardwood
forests. Today chestnuts over twenty or twenty-five feet are virtually
nonexistent, and the forest is less diverse.
Another invader was the gypsy moth. Imported in the last century
with the forlorn hope of providing silk, the species escaped,
causing havoc in the forest and reminding us once again that there
is no substitute for choking these things off at the source, the
proverbial ounce of prevention. If any good came from the gypsy
moth, it was perhaps that it refocused attention on biological
controls versus chemical controls Clearly, an ecologically
principled approach based on biocontrol makes more long-term sense
in controlling gypsy moth and other pests. The experience at Hawk
Mountain was that not spraying the forest had the better long-term
result than what was obtained at the adjacent sprayed forests
(L. Goodrich, "Winter in June," Hawk Mountain News,
No.74. Winter 1991, pp. 11 ff.). Our own experience at New Jersey
Audubon's Scherman-Hoffman Sanctuary in Bernardsville was the
same, during the infestations in the late sixties and in the seventies.
Biocontrol of exotic pests tends to be proactive, whereas chemical
control is remedial or reactive in nature. An ecological strategy
which checks the spread of a pest is better than a patchwork chemical
elimination of the pest in limited areas. A recent special report
of the National Audubon Society, "Exotic Pests: A Growing
Threat to the Environment" (NAS, June 1994), details the
threats to biodiversity and the economic damage caused by exotics
and urges a proactive strategy. The report cites (among other
pests) the case of purple loosestrife, now a national threat which
has cost millions of dollars in damages in nineteen states. There
is now hope for biological control of this species in the form
of two leaf-eating beetles and a root-mining weevil.
Purple loosestrife is a threat in New Jersey for many reasons.
It is a beautiful plant, attractive to insects, easily spread,
and often sold in nurseries. Consequently, it has lots of help
from people in invading wetlands, outcompeting native wetland
plants. eliminating wetland biodiversity, destroying endangered
species habitat, and lowering the value of wetland habitats. It
forms dense clusters and is hard to eradicate, even with sprays
permitted in wetlands. The time to develop a sensible, proactive,
ecologically beneficial long-term strategy is now. We need to
employ the control insects to prevent the spread of the plant,
and we need to eliminate the sale and transport of the species.
The state should consider declaring this species a noxious weed,
as the state of Washington has done, and ban its sale. New Jersey
is 19 percent wetlands by area, so we have a lot to lose in valuable
habitat and species.
In particular the federally listed swamp pink (Helonias bullata)
could be threatened by the spread of purple loose-strife. We don't
want to jeopardize the substantial benefits obtained by the 1988
Freshwater Wetlands Protection Act because of the preventable
spread of an exotic pest.
Another flash point for New Jersey is autumn olive, which in the
past has been highly touted as a wildlife food by wildlife agencies
and Audubon folks, and widely used for bank stabilization near
bridges, highway culverts, and the like. We need to rethink the
love affair with this plant. Yes, it does feed thirty species
of birds in New Jersey, and mammals as well, but it has a downside.
Autumn olive takes over and crowds out native shrubs which also
bear fruit. The other native shrubs which it crowds out have maturation
cycles timed to coincide with migratory bird passage and departure.
Many of these are long-distance migrants dependent on fruit or
the attendant native insects. These are not available from autumn
olive. The time of ripening is key. The loss of native shrubs
and trees to competition with this aggressive species has been
noted by biologists and ecologists around the state in successional
fields and even on the Delaware Bay-shore in salt marsh habitat.
At least to some extent this species can be controlled manually
in the proper management of fields. Again we need a strategy of
long-term control which will prevent monocultures of this plant
in fields and forest openings.
Richard Kane
Director of Conservation
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