Grant helps invasive plant fight in Michigan Upper Peninsula

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Invasive plant species such as garlic mustard (pictured here) threaten Great Lakes ecosystems. Photo by Elizabeth Coyne, Central Upper Peninsula Cooperative Weed Management Area

By Laura Fosmire

LANSING, Mich. — While most of the media focus is on the Asian carp invasion of Lake Michigan, other alien species are slipping into Michigan’s Upper Peninsula.

These are plants, not fish or animals, and several programs are fighting these threats to forests and parks.

For example, the Upper Peninsula Resources Conservation and Development Council received a $150,000 grant through the federal Sustain Our Great Lakes program to add the U.P. to an information network for identifying and controlling invasive plants.

Elizabeth Coyne, coordinator for the Central Upper Peninsula Cooperative Weed Management Area in Marquette, said plant species endangering the U.P. include garlic mustard, purple loosestrife, phragmites and Eurasian water-milfoil.

“We’re really focused on garlic mustard because of the potential it has of damage to timber resources,” she said. “It manages to dominate the understory, which then represses tree regeneration.”

Phragmites are a reed and pose a problem in the southern U.P. along the Lake Michigan shore, she added.

Coyne said invasive plants tend to dominate the competition, jeopardizing native habitats.

“They can either suppress other plants through chemicals that they release into the soil, or they just grow so fast that they have a competitive advantage,” she said.

Garlic mustard, for example, sprouts earlier than many native plants — as soon as the snow’s gone, she said.

Fighting the invaders

Here’s a video of efforts to control the spread of garlic mustard.

Coyne said the goal of the management area isn’t to eradicate invasives because that’s impossible.

“Instead, we try to control them everywhere they occur,” she said. “We focus on areas that haven’t yet been subjected to invasion, where we use rapid response or early detection methods.”

Early detection, Coyne explained, is key to preventing invaders from overwhelming an area, and there are a number of tactics to keep them down.

“In some cases like garlic mustard, it’s effective to just pull the whole plant out of the ground,” she said. “With others, if you break off a part of the plant, it can just grow back. So we use other methods like mowing, herbicides or even controlled burning.”

But the difficulty is that different plants respond best to different tactics, Coyne said. “Some species are invigorated by burning or can just grow back,” she said.

Coyne said people spread invasive plants without knowing it.

“You can easily pick up seeds on your clothes or shoes or even your car,” she said. “With aquatic plants that grow from fragments, they can stick to your boat. When you move your boat to another lake, if you don’t entirely clean off those fragments, you can bring it to the next lake.”

Fending off invasives is a group effort

Darcy Rutkowski, executive assistant for the council, said much of the grant will be spent to train volunteers who will contribute information to the network.

She said that their experience is valuable because there is little to no information about the U.P. on the current map of invasive species in Michigan.

Rutkowski said many U.P. organizations are already combating invasives, and the network will help them to cooperate with each other.

“Almost every county in the state has a conservation group associated with it,” she said. “In each county we have a rapid response team to provide early detection and control in their areas. We’re trying to pull together a lot of the agencies and other groups.”

The council will sponsor workshops in the U.P. to help agencies collaborate, Rutkowski said.

She said it’s important for agencies to work together because it’s easier if a united front fights invasives.

“Invasive species don’t recognize boundaries between national forests and park lands,” she said. “If one group is trying to control a particular species, it’s not going to do a lot of good if you don’t control it in the surrounding areas.”

Rutkowski said although only trained volunteers can put data into the network, the public can view its information on the Michigan Invasive Species Information website.

Coyne said that a statewide network for identifying these plants and their locations would be extremely useful.

“Early detection is really key,” she said. “If we can figure out where they are and get to them before it becomes a large infestation, then we might be able to make a difference.”

Other groups benefiting from the federal grant program include the Grand Rapids-based Schrems West Michigan chapter of Trout Unlimited to improve habitat on the Coldwater River in Branch County and the Grayling-based Huron Pines Resource Conservation and Development Council for a project along Silver Creek in Presque Isle County.

The others are Lake Superior State University to research piping plover, the Michigan Natural Features Inventory to fight phragmites along Lake Huron and the Ann Arbor-based Stewardship Network, which will coordinate volunteer efforts to remove garlic mustard across the Great Lakes basin.

© 2010, Capital News Service, Michigan State University School of Journalism. Not to be reproduced without permission.

4 thoughts on “Grant helps invasive plant fight in Michigan Upper Peninsula

  1. I was google image searching a suspicious plant in my new house’s garden to see if it was a weed or not and this article helped me! It is definitely Garlic Mustard and it and it’s friends are coming out!

    Thanks!

  2. Phragmites has also become established along the St. Marys RIver.
    I have seen stands in Munuscong Bay which is ideally suited (unfortunately) for a phragmites takeover and along the western shore of Neebish Island. It is also becoming common in roadside ditches in Chippewa County.

  3. It’s unfortunate that there is so little money to fund wildlife use of non-native plants. As the article points out, some are here to stay (especially woody species). We need to understand how, if at all, wildlife species use these plants for food or shelter, which species perform ecological functions and at what levels, how long-established non-native plants may be evolving to adapt to local conditions, and whether any of these benefits outweigh their ecological costs.

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