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Plant The Trees
The Nuance of Invasive Species
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An audio-version of our written article:
https://www.propagateag.com/blog/the-nuance-of-invasive-species
- The Threat of Invasive Species
- The American Chestnut (blight) and Climate Analogues
- Native to when? → Black Locust's native range
- Those who live in glass houses... Introspection without despair.
- What can we do? Narrative vs. Action.
- Agroforestry Systems as an actionable next step
Intro:
Invasive species are non-native plants, animals, fungi, and pathogens that spread aggressively and disrupt native ecosystems.
Documentary films on invasive species abound. Complete with dark humor and foreboding music, one memorable film featured cane toads in Australia. In 1935, 100 cane toads were introduced for pest control. They swiftly became a fleet of 200 million toads. These frogs are 6-10 inches long, and have toxic glands behind their head which poison the animals that attempt to eat them. When these predators die, the ecosystem loses balance: animals that would have otherwise been their prey explode in population. Invasive animals can be extremely problematic, given how fast they move. Domestic cats, introduced to Australia with British colonization, are responsible for the extinction of 29 species of mammals indigenous to Australia. After broad habitat destruction, domestic cats are the #1 cause of bird death in North America. Stateside, feral swine are responsible for $1.6b in damages to the agricultural industry. Burmese pythons are decimating native mammal populations in the Florida Everglades. Alien invasive animals, fungi, and insects make for a loaded term: invasive. Trees and shrubs can also be invasive, even though they move more slowly than animals. But there’s nuance here. Today we’ll unpack invasive species.
Welcome back to Plant the Trees. I'm your host, Harry Green, co-founder and chief Address the Constraint of the Business Officer at Propagate. We plant profitable trees on farmland in the eastern United States. Today we have an audiobook adjacent episode for you. I'll read you an article I wrote called The Nuance of Invasive Species. But before I get into that, we're going to host an upcoming QA episode that's question and answer. So send me your questions via Instagram, Facebook, Passenger Pigeon, LinkedIn, or just comment on this episode on Spotify. I don't love email, so only email me if you don't use any of the aforementioned platforms. Without further ado, this is the nuance of invasive species. Subtitle The Threat of Invasive Species. Invasive Species are non-native plants, animals, fungi, and pathogens that spread aggressively and disrupt native ecosystems. Documentary films on invasive species abound. Complete with dark humor and foreboding music, one memorable film featured cane toads in Australia. In 1935, 100 cane toads were introduced for pest control. They swiftly became a fleet of 200 million toads these frogs are 6 to 10 inches in length and have toxic glands behind their head, which poison the animals that attempt to eat them. When these predators die, the ecosystem loses balance. Animals that would have otherwise been their prey explode in population. Invasive animals can be extremely problematic, given how fast they move. Domestic cats, introduced to Australia with British colonization, are responsible for the extinction of 29 species of mammals indigenous to Australia. And after broad habitat destruction, domestic cats are the number one cause of bird death in North America. Stateside feral swine are responsible for $1.6 billion in damages to the agricultural industry every year. Burmese pythons are decimating native mammal populations in the Florida Evergrades. Alien invasive animals, fungi, and insects make for a loaded term invasive. Trees and shrubs can also be invasive, even though they move more slowly than animals. But there's nuance here. Today we'll unpack invasive species. Subtitle number two The American Chestnut and Climate Analogs The climates of China and the eastern United States are strikingly similar, but geographically separate. This makes for explosive ecological interactions. Thirty to forty five million years ago, the American chestnut and the Chinese chestnut had a common ancestor, but the two species separated as ice age glaciers advanced. The chestnut populations grew to be different species, adapting to unique landscapes and biology. The chestnut blight evolved in Asia. In East Asia, in the country that is now known as China, a pathogenic fungus grew to associate with Castinea milesima, the Chinese chestnut. Given ample time, the tree developed resistance to fungus, and they now coexist. The chestnuts of North America, separated for millions of years by the Pacific Ocean, Intermountain West, Rocky Mountains, and Great Plains, developed no such resistance. When humans brought chestnut trees, and perhaps boxes made of green lumber, from East Asia to East North America in the late 1800s, the fungus came along as a stowaway. The chestnut blight ravaged the American chestnut, killing four billion trees and leaving it functionally extinct. It's fair to say that this fungus, hosted by chestnut and oak trees, is invasive to North America, though the Chinese chestnut tree itself does not spread aggressively. There's a photo here of Cryphonectria parasitica, the chestnut blight. It girdles American chestnut trees, killing them to the ground. The trees resprout from the stump but no longer serve their functional role. Eastern North America and East Asia have dramatically similar climates. New York is much like Korea. From Kansas to Virginia and south to Georgia, we share many climates with China. Florida is much like Taiwan. Washington, DC, and Maine map onto Japan, albeit with less snow. With this climatic similarity come similar plants, animals, and fungi. The fruits that have immigrated from East Asia to the eastern USA are much less susceptible to our various pests. Asian pears are generally lower maintenance than European pears, and the same is true of Asian persimmons, Diaspiros kaki and Loquats, Area Botria japonica. Apples and peaches, by contrast, are native to the dry air of Kazakhstan and southwestern China, and they exhibit higher pest pressure from New York to Georgia. Many invasive trees and shrubs come from China. For the same reason that the fruit trees of East Asia are easy to cultivate, certain trees and shrubs of that region can take hold in eastern North America and spread unchecked. Shrubs such as Japanese honeysuckle, Japanese Barberry, and Chinese privet can grow in dense thickets and impede the natural development of a forest. It's important to note that non-native invasive shrubs are not a one-directional offense. Common rhododendron, though it's a beloved native landscape plant in the United States, is an issue in England. American wild grape. The vines, they tear down trees. And easily the most disturbing, poison ivy was introduced to the European estates for its colorful fall foliage. Even later successional trees, such as black cherry, can displace native vegetation from the Netherlands to Poland. Subtitle. Native to When? Species will always move around. Migratory birds can spread seeds, insects, fish eggs, and snails. But trees rarely cross oceans, deserts, and large mountain ranges without assistance from humans. Starting in 1492, the spread of plants and animals drastically accelerated. From Columbus through to European contact with Australia in 1606 and ongoing with modern globalization, the Columbian exchange has spread beneficial, neutral, and detrimental species across the earth. Non-native immigrant species can be good, neutral, or generally bad, from ecologically beneficial to ecologically detrimental. Chinese chestnuts are generally beneficial in North America, producing large mast crops for wildlife and supporting native insects relatively well. Similarly, many exotic species of willow provide water filtration for aquatic life if you take a corn soy field as the baseline, and they yield food for native bees. Two classic neutral species are ginkgo boloba and domestic apples. Ginkgos look nice, but they don't do much for wildlife. Apples yield some food for wildlife, but they're ecologically okay. Neither tree spreads aggressively. By contrast, detrimental trees usually spread aggressively. They outcompete native species and yield sub-optimal wildlife food. The berries of European buckthorn are high in sugar and water, but lower in fats, making them a mediocre food source for migratory birds. Buckthorn spreads rapidly and is widely considered a detractor. Now, native species can also become detractors to a certain extent. In the absence of fire in the Great Plains, along with tens of millions of bison beating back woody vegetation, eastern red cedar has become an absolute plague for ranchers. The tree is drought tolerant and shades out grass and prairie, which is bad for both beef fields and grassland birds. Black locust, Rabinia pseudoacacia, is a divisive and unique specimen in this conversation. Black locust is a fast-growing pioneer species, originating in the central Appalachian and Ozark Mountains. It grows half-inch thorns on its juvenile wood, which fall off after the tree reaches five inches in diameter. It sends up shoots from the roots, especially after being cut down. It's not shade tolerant and often grows on abandoned farmland, roadsides, and other disturbed sites. The fence posts it yields and lumber are rot resistant and can last two to three times as long as pressure-treated pine in contact with the soil. Black locust flowers bloom bright white in the spring and feed both native and introduced pollinators. Black locust honey is bright and neutral. Land managers across the world have a love-hate relationship with this tree. Growing it for fence posts and lumber can yield higher economic returns than corn and soy, but if unmanaged, it can become a thicket of thorns. Black locust requires active management. Contrasted with pine and spruce trees, black locust trees grow back after they are cut down. A single stem is then selected from each re-sprouting stump, and the stand is managed for another harvest. Black locust can also be grown with secondary successional species. After the locust is harvested for posts and saw logs, it can be shaded out by accompanying oaks and walnuts. One million acres or 400,000 hectares of black locust in Hungary create tens of thousands of jobs. But outside the range of its native pests, it thrives in the dry sandy plains and displaces native oak savannah and forest. Now, are red cedar and black locusts invasive to the eastern half of North America? There's no natural barrier, such as an ocean or a mountain range that would halt their progression out of the range in which Europeans found them in 1492. An argument can be made in either direction. In the absence of natural processes, both of these species can act invasively. But we must ask, what landscape are they invading? Why do they have this opportunity? Is the tree species itself invasive? Or is our removal of forests, fires, and bison herds an invasive act while the tree is simply doing what it evolved to do? Biomes shift and ecosystems change naturally, albeit slowly. Twenty thousand years ago, Syracuse, New York was under one mile of ice. The ancient lakes of the Sahara Desert were quite impressive. Our current challenge is the rate of ecological change. Humans are changing landscapes faster than anything aside from massive volcanic eruptions or an asteroid. Subtitle Those Who Live in Glasshouses We would be remiss to look in the mirror. Humans who live in glasshouses should not throw stones. Within a few centuries of humans arriving in North America, fifty to seventy species of large animals went extinct due to overhunting. Woolly mammoths, giant sloths, and giant beavers feared the short-faced bear, saber-toothed cat, and other massive predators of the Pleistocene. But they did not fear the bands of Homo sapiens armed with spears, stones, and fire. African elephants, wildebeest, and kudu evolved with humans, and with us a healthy fear of predation. Now, demonizing humans in this way can trend nihilist and mephistophelian, and that is not my intent with this paragraph. It is simply important to examine our own ecological impact before vilifying the trees and shrubs we transport. Are there other ecological maladies we could remedy first? If Chinese privet is invasive, what is a parking lot? If bush honeysuckle is choking the forest, what of the endless acres of monoculture corn and soy planted on what used to be forest and prairie? Food security is important and famine is awful. And we must acknowledge the contradiction of allowing woody shrubs to be our chosen antagonist while turning a blind eye to our direct influence on God's green earth. Are these plants psychologically invasive? One main distinction here is that invasive species threaten our sense of order. They are not within our control. Conversely, parking lots negate aesthetic experience and compassion for non-human life. Different desires for landscape, spurred by personality traits, likely influence our distaste for the various threats to nature. Mint, planted in gardens, gets out of control, invading our garlic beds. But mint is not ecologically invasive. Six inch honey locust thorns from Gladitzia triacanthos can pop tractor tires. Black locust thorns, Ribinia pseudoacacia, get lodged in our hands. This is to say that we must distinguish between plants and animals that annoy us and plants that cause overt ecological harm. Subtitle. What can we do if doing the right thing is often more important than thinking the right thing. Ecologists are trained to observe nature without intervening too much. Action frequently is a blind spot. Loggers, by contrast, are trained to harvest timber, which is a significant intervention, and they are not tasked with observing nature. Foresters bridge that gap. Farmers focus on growing food for people, with a select few managing farmland like an intact ecology. This is to say that if those who are ecologically aware leave all of the active and engaged landscape management to those that are ecologically unaware, our landscapes will follow suit and degrade. We must create an alternative to invasive species. We can go out and start controlling woody invasive plants, but this battle can feel Sissiphian. We can mow them down with a forestry multure, and they'll often grow right back. Herbicide can be incredibly useful, but also carcinogenic. Japanese knotweed is largely herbicide resistant. Occasionally, introduced fungi and insects can act as biocontrol agents for invasive vegetation, but these controls can themselves become invasive. See the aroma, gypsy, or spongy moth, Limantria dispar. The process for introducing biocontrols must be rigorous and involved preemptive phylogenic analyses to test efficacy and the effects on native species in a controlled environment to the extent that that's possible. In any case, we must ask the question, what next? One avenue is to create an economically and ecologically viable alternative to degraded landscapes. Concluding subtitle, agroforestry systems. Agroforestry is the intentional integration of trees and farming. It ranges from farming with trees to farming the trees themselves to adding an agricultural component to existing forest. Practices range from alley cropping hybrid poplar with wheat in France to multistrata native cacao avocado systems in Latin America, to black locust black walnut silvo pasture in New York State. Agroforestry systems usually have a component of succession. They are tasked with producing food for society in a way that exhibits stewardship. They are ideally neutral or beneficial uses of land. Agroforestry systems can be an alternative to both conventional monocultures and neglected land use. To conclude, we must think in holes, not just in parts. Not seeing the forest for the trees is a common idiom that refers to tunnel vision focus on the details of an issue without seeing the whole picture. The ending of that phrase is often left off. He cannot see the forest, for the trees are in the way. Invasive shrubs can indeed prevent us from seeing the forest in a very literal sense. Let us first understand them, remove them as is needed and possible, and create an alternative. At this point in human history, we need to point the ship towards what we do want. Thanks for listening along. In the winter of 2019 and 2020, I actually wrote a few chapters of a book with the preliminary title Profitable Tree Crops. We're currently focused on doing the things in the book, so I haven't finished it yet. In the meantime, Propagate Ops and Research Associate Alyssa Gordon and I write a good number of articles like this that you can find on the news and research section of our website. Propagate COO Jeremy Kaufman is also soon to release a white paper and interactive website on investing in agroforestry, regenerative agriculture, tree crops, and the like. If you enjoyed the audio version of this article, let me know in the comments on Spotify or via the various social medias. Just not while you're driving or operating machinery. And call back to the intro if you have questions that you'd like to submit for a QA episode, go ahead and do that now. Until next time, plant the trees and make it count.