ECO-FRIENDLY HABITAT RESTORATION: USING PHOTO-DEPRIVATION TO ERADICATE PHRAGMITES AUSTRALIS AND PROMOTE NATIVE PLANT SUCCESSION IN PIERMONT MARSH, NEW YORK, CONTINUED

2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
John Bjornton ◽  
◽  
Yalinel Beltre ◽  
Alondra Cruz ◽  
Brian Delgado ◽  
...  
Soil Systems ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 4 (1) ◽  
pp. 12 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dierk Michaelis ◽  
Almut Mrotzek ◽  
John Couwenberg

We present analyses of macroscopic and microscopic remains as a tool to characterise sedge fen peats. We use it to describe peat composition and stages of peat decomposition, to assess the success of rewetting of a formerly drained fen, and to understand the workings of these novel ecosystems. We studied two percolation fen sites, one drained and one drained and rewetted 20 years ago. Years of deep drainage have resulted in a layer of strongly decomposed peat which lacks recognizable macro-remains. We could associate micro-remains with macro-remains, and thus still characterise the peat and the plants that once formed it. We show that the strongly decomposed peat is of the same origin as the slightly decomposed peat below, and that is was ploughed. We present descriptions of eight types of the main constituent of sedge peat: plant roots, including Carex rostrata type, C. lasiocarpa/rostrata type, C. limosa type, C. acutiformis type, C. echinata type, Phragmites australis type, Cladium type, Equisetum type. We describe three new non-pollen palynomorph types (microscopic remains) and five new subtypes. The rewetted fen provides insights into plant succession after rewetting and the formation of peat that predominantly consists of roots. Results indicate that leaf sheaths may be a consistent component of the peat.


2019 ◽  
Vol 9 (24) ◽  
pp. 13835-13849 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christine B. Rohal ◽  
Chad Cranney ◽  
Eric L. G. Hazelton ◽  
Karin M. Kettenring

Author(s):  
Liz Koziol ◽  
Jonathan T. Bauer ◽  
Eric B. Duell ◽  
Karen Hickman ◽  
Geoffrey L. House ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Tedmund J. Swiecki ◽  
Elizabeth A. Bernhardt ◽  
Susan J. Frankel ◽  
Diana Benner ◽  
Janell Hillman

Widespread Phytophthora infections have been discovered in nursery stock used in California restoration plantings. In response, nursery Phytophthora best management practices (NPBMPs) designed to exclude Phytophthora from nursery plants were developed to address the need for clean planting stock in restoration projects. A pilot program to implement the systematic use of the NPBMPs, Accreditation to Improve Restoration (AIR), was developed and started in 2018. As of 2020, 13 northern California restoration nurseries have been evaluated and five have met all the program requirements. In 564 tests conducted over four years with a sensitive leachate baiting protocol, no Phytophthora was detected from over 20,000 nursery plants produced in compliance with the NPBMPs. In comparison, Phytophthora was detected in 25% of tests conducted on partially-compliant stock, and in 71% of tests from nurseries following few or no NPBMPs. The AIR pilot program has demonstrated that container stock free of detectable Phytophthora can be reliably produced by adhering to an integrated program of clean nursery production practices. To obtain Phytophthora-free plants for habitat restoration, informed clients were willing to pay increased costs required to produce NPBMP-compliant nursery stock.


2018 ◽  
Vol 11 (4) ◽  
pp. 175-180 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christopher L. Zimmerman ◽  
Rebecca R. Shirer ◽  
Jeffrey D. Corbin

AbstractProjects that aim to control invasive species often assume that a reduction of the target species will increase native species abundance. However, reports of the responses of native species following exotic species control are relatively rare. We assessed the recovery of the native community in five tidal wetland locations in which we attempted to eradicate the invasive common reed [Phragmites australis (Cav.) Trin. ex Steud.]. We tested whether 3 yr of treatment were able to eradicate Phragmites and promote recovery of the native plant community. After 3 yr of treatment, Phragmites density declined sharply in all treated stands, though it was not eradicated in any of them. Native plant cover increased significantly in treated areas, and community composition, particularly in smaller stands, converged toward that of uninvaded habitat. Thus, even within the relatively short timescale of the treatments and monitoring, significant progress was made toward achieving the goals of controlling Phragmites infestations and promoting native biodiversity. There was a trend toward greater promise for success in smaller stands than larger stands, as has been observed in other studies. A greater emphasis on monitoring whole-community responses to exotic plant control, across a range of conditions, would enhance our ability to plan and design successful management strategies.


2014 ◽  
Vol 7 (3) ◽  
pp. 445-453 ◽  
Author(s):  
Daniel B. Breen ◽  
Stephen D. Bailey ◽  
Helen A. Violi

AbstractFollowing large-scale herbicide spraying and burning on Assateague Island, a barrier bar island located in Maryland and Virginia, the invasive common reed (Phragmites australis) was largely reduced from vast monocultures to less dense patches interspersed within maritime shrublands. To improve the control of these remnant/reemerging infestations and limit further nontarget damage, we tested three new treatments: mechanical cutting followed by dripping imazapyr onto stems, cutting followed 2 wk later by the foliar spraying of regrowth, and simple cutting with and without the removal of Phragmites litter. All herbicide treatments and cutting paired with litter removal significantly reduced Phragmites coverage (P ≤ 0.01) when compared with untreated controls. Native plant coverage was significantly greater after the cut-stem treatment than after traditional foliar spraying (P ≤ 0.01) because of the former's reduced herbicide use and more direct contact limited to Phragmites stems; native coverage was also greater after litter removal than when litter remained (P ≤ 0.001). Cutting followed by stem applications of herbicide is an effective means of treating scattered common reed stands in sensitive habitats, and litter removal after cutting can provide native vegetation with an advantage at recolonization.


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