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Invasive Species of the BU Nature Preserve
More information will be available as this page develops.
Help Keep
Tree Diseases and Invasive Plants out of the Nature Preserve!
One Note for Travelers:
The Nature Preserve is vulnerable to invasive plants and diseases. Try to wash yourselves
and your clothes several times before going into the Nature Preserve after
traveling to areas with invasive plants or plant diseases. Luckily soap is toxic to some tree killers, such as the Hemlock wooly adelgid
and some tree pathogens.
There
are many exotic, or non-native, species in the Nature Preserve and
unfortunately, many are invasive. Exotic species are plants or
animals that normally don't live in our region and have been introduced
either by accident or delibrately planted in the area(non-native).
Exotic species can be harmless, but many are harmful. A
species is considered invasive when it pushes indigenous species out or
does some other harm to an ecosystem.
Part
of the ongoing management of the Nature Preserve is fighting the spread
of invasive species. Unfortunately, there aren't too many methods
that have been successfull besides poisoning with herbicides.
Even poisoning is rarely a permanent solution. In the
Nature Preserve, so far, we have tried manual cutting or pulling of
certain species.
Some examples of invasive and potentially invasive plants in the Nature Preserve:
Common (Giant) reed, Phragmites australis -- west end of West
Marsh, NP
Purple loosestrife, Lythrum salicaria
Honeysuckle, Lonicera tatarica x morrowii
Oriental bittersweet, Celastrus orbiculatus -- one patch near
western end of Marsh Trail
Japanese knotweed, Polygonum cuspidatum -- west side of Lot
M; around Science 1
Garlic-mustard, Alliaria petiolata
Multiflora-rose, Rosa multiflora thorn filled plant found throughout the woods areas in varying densities.
Japanese barberry, Berberis thunbergii
Autumn olive, Elaeagnus umbellata
Some Examples of non-native or exotic plants:
Norway-maple, Acer platanoides -- planted on campus
Balsam fir, Abies balsamea -- planted along Marsh Trail in early 1990s
White spruce, Picea glauca -- planted along Marsh Trail about 1970
Norway spruce, Picea abies -- planted along Marsh Trail
about 1970; plantation near Susquehanna Community
Northern white cedar, Thuja occidentalis -- planted along
Marsh Trail about 1970
English plantain, Plantago lanceolata
Chicory, Cichorium intybus
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