Blogs And Weeds

June 13, 2008

Exotic Plants and Biodiversity: A Cause and Effect Tale

A plant native to Asia sprouts. It is pulled from it’s native waters and shipped to an aquarium wholesaler in South Florida. It is bought by a family in a goldfish bowl along with some gravel, and a small goldfish. The goldfish is forgotten during the family vacation, the goldfish dies, and is buried at sea, along with the contents of the bowl.

The plant from the fish bowl survives, and likes it’s new home. It produces more plants, which, in turn, produce even more, now growing exponentially. An out of state boater doesn’t clean his boat well after a fishing vacation to the area, and travels back to his state with a hitch hiker or two. These plants survive the trip, and find a new home in the first lake the boater puts into.

They like the new lake, and thrive. More boaters do the same through various parts of the country. The plant becomes the dominant species in it’s new homes, and gradually eliminates all other plants in these lakes. the small fish that enjoyed the new cover in it’s early stages, now have lost the plants that support the micro invertebrates that fed them. They disappear. The larger fish that survived by eating the smaller fish, now begin to dwindle. Other animals that consumed the larger fish, and some of the now missing native plants for survival, now move to other areas, and populations decrease.

Fishermen, who once thought that the cover provided by the invaders was good for fishing, now find their favorite spots devoid of fish, and move to other spots, possibly taking the predator with them along with their sport fishing dollars, and the local bait and tackle shops close. This strains the local economic resources, and some local services are no longer available.

The animals who once fed on the fish, have moved away, no longer eat another of the invasive plants (brought here on purpose, and heretofore, seemingly dormant) in the forest, which now takes over the sub canopy, and eliminates the food that deer used for browsing. Scarce food, and unusual disease (brought on by lack of nutrients from some of the now defunct native species) force the dwindling whitetail population to move out of the area. Hunting and the tourism trade in the area now cease.

The proprietors of the local hunting and fishing store close down shop and move to South Florida where they open a small aquarium shop, no longer able to survive in their native area.

They can no longer pay into their children’s college funds, and one of the children, who was destined to discover a cure for cancer, turns to petty theft to help support his family. The cure is lost forever. Little Timmy is bound for a life of crime, and the cancer cure was found in a plant that existed only in a small pond in his native home, which was destroyed by the invasive aquatic plant.

A little heavy on the pathos, perhaps, but not far from the truth! This fictitious(?) story illustrates some of the problems related to exotic plants and loss of biodiversity.

*Exotic plants move. They do not stay in the same area forever, and they have many means of locomotion.

*Each change in an ecosystem brings about other changes, which in turn, bring about other changes…

*These changes eventually effect the human population economically and in other ways.

Learn more about our dwindling native species population and biodiversity.

AddThis Social Bookmark Button



June 4, 2008

Habitat protection | Aquatic Agricultural Forest Industrial

Filed under: Biodiversity — rational @ 5:07 pm

More Vegetation Management information. With exotic weeds destroying forests, pastures, lakes, and farms, it is high time we started learning about this trade, and what it does to keep our environment safe and our infrastructure functioning.

read more | digg story

AddThis Social Bookmark Button



May 24, 2008

Preserving Biodiversity How You Can Help | True Green Soluti

Filed under: Biodiversity — rational @ 1:08 pm

Everyone should already be aware that biodiversity and all of it’s many facets are a big topic these days. Besides traveling to the Amazon and chaining yourself to a tree in the rain forest, what can you do to help? This page provides some tips on how to get involved at home!

read more | digg story


AddThis Social Bookmark Button


May 19, 2008

Brush Control As Pest Prevention

Filed under: Biodiversity — Tags: , , , , — rational @ 10:38 pm

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

This is our second installment of our pest prevention series:

Brush control as pest prevention:

Many Entomologists estimate that 90 percent of the pests which plague us inside our homes, come from outside. I think it is actually 100 percent, since the pests existed before any human building project occurred. The fact is, that the pests that bug you, in your home, come from outside your home.

If you have brush and weeds near your home, you have a bug and rodent farm near your home.

For the rest of the story on the topic of brush control, see Brush Control as Pest Prevention.


Powered by WordPress