DEC AND PARTNERS TO TRACK POSSIBLE SPREAD OF INVASIVE BEETLE

Posted June 9, 2009 by nyflora
Categories: Invasive Species

Emerald Ash Borer Traps Are Being Deployed Throughout the State

The New York State Department of Environmental Conservation (DEC), along with other federal and state agencies, is setting baited traps in ash trees across upstate New York in an effort to search for possible infestations of the Emerald Ash Borer (EAB), a tree-killing beetle. The public will soon be seeing the purple prism traps deployed in treelines throughout New York, with a concentration in areas adjacent to neighboring states and Canadian provinces that have already detected this potentially devastating invasive species.

It has been documented that a main route that enables this insect, as well as other invasive species, to spread is from moving firewood from one place to another. That is why in 2008, New York adopted regulations that ban untreated firewood from entering the state and restricts intrastate movement of untreated firewood to no more than a 50-mile radius from its source ( http://www.dec.ny.gov/animals/28722.html ).

New York has more than 900 million ash trees, representing about 7 percent of all trees in the state, and all are at risk should this invasive, exotic pest become established. Many communities are at particular risk because ash was widely planted as a street tree after Dutch elm disease killed many urban trees.

“The EAB is a significant threat to New York State’s ash trees,” said State Forester Robert K. Davies. “While the EAB has not yet been positively documented within New York State, it is getting closer each day, so we must remain vigilant in monitoring our resources so that if detected, an appropriate response can be employed to protect our trees.”

DEC’s approach to monitoring for the insect is two-fold. First, traps to attract and catch the EAB are being hung in ash trees within a 100-mile radius from previously documented EAB locations in Ontario and Quebec, Canada, and central Pennsylvania. During June, traps will be placed in Western New York areas including Chautauqua, Cattaraugus, Allegany, Erie, Wyoming, Niagara, Orleans, Genesee, Livingston, and Monroe counties and in Jefferson, St. Lawrence, Franklin, and Clinton counties along our northern border. Second, DEC will be monitoring “high-risk sites” compiled by state forest health experts. These areas will include campgrounds, major highway corridors, wood industries, and locations with large ash populations. Altogether, nearly 6,000 traps will be deployed across the state.

The bright purple, prism-shaped EAB traps are made of sticky-coated corrugated plastic and contain scented lures. After 45 days, the traps will be inspected and samples collected. After 90 days, the traps will be collected and removed from the tree. If visitors encounter an EAB trap hanging in an ash tree while at a park or state forest, please help the survey effort by leaving it in place.

DEC is participating in the survey with the state Department of Agriculture and Markets, the state Office of Parks, and Recreation and Historic Preservation, the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Animal Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS) and other volunteer organizations such as The Nature Conservancy and land trusts.

The EAB (photo: http://www.dec.ny.gov/animals/7253.html ) is a small but destructive beetle that infests and kills North American ash tree species, including green, white, black and blue ash. Damage is caused by the larvae, which feed in tunnels called galleries in the phloem just below the bark. The serpentine galleries disrupt water and nutrient transport, causing branches, and eventually the entire tree, to die. Since its discovery in southeastern Michigan in 2002, the EAB is responsible for the destruction of over 70 million ash trees in the U.S. The beetle has been moving steadily outward from its first discovered infestation in Detroit, Michigan, and has now been found in 12 states and two neighboring Canadian provinces.

The EAB has metallic green wing covers and a coppery red or purple abdomen; it is small enough to fit easily on a penny. Adult beetles leave distinctive D-shaped exit holes in the outer bark of the branches and the trunk. Other signs of infection include tree canopy dieback, yellowing, extensive sprouting from the roots and trunk (called “epicormic shoots”) and browning of leaves. Infested trees may also exhibit woodpecker damage from larvae extraction. Individual, infested trees can be saved by applying specific insecticides but this treatment is neither practicable nor environmentally appropriate to consider for infested forests or large groups of trees.

Visit The Adirondack Park Nature Report Website

Posted June 5, 2009 by nyflora
Categories: Natural History, Plant Organizations

You will find a lot of interesting articles, audio reports and videos about nature and the Adirondacks including many articles about plants. Check it out!

http://www.adkparknature.net/

Eastern North America Yarrow Study Needs Your Help

Posted June 5, 2009 by nyflora
Categories: Happenings, Taxonomy

Assistant Professor Justin Ramsey from the University of Rochester is studying eastern North American Yarrow (Achillea) species. He would like to do some chloroplast sequencing and cytotyping of populations to distinguish native vs. introduced plants.

If interested people stumble across Achillea populations this spring/summer, he would definitely like to incorporate their collections into his sampling.
He would be interested in populations from natural grassland environments (alpine, lakeshores, rocky outcrops) as well as more disturbed areas (roadsides, old fields, ditches) throughout the northeast U.S. and Canada.

He is hoping to measure leaf/stem traits in a common garden experiment next summer so would be interested in live plants if possible– small leafy stems with a bit of rhizome and root material transport really well. He could provide collection suggestions, boxes and pre-paid Fed-Ex receipts if that would be helpful.

Thanks again for any assistance you can provide and he will keep you informed of his findings regarding the eastern yarrows.

Justin Ramsey
Assistant Professor
Department of Biology
University of Rochester
213 Hutchison Hall, River Campus
Rochester, NY 14627-0211
USA

Phone: 585-273-5481
Fax: 585-275-2070
Email: justin_ramsey@mac.com
Website: http://web.mac.com/justin_ramsey/

What’s Blooming in Central New York Fens.

Posted June 1, 2009 by nyflora
Categories: What's Blooming

Patrick Raney, a PhD student at SUNY ESF in Syracuse is monitoring fen plots in Central NY and getting around to all of his plots every 2 weeks. Here is his recent phenology data for these plots.  Thanks Patrick!

In bloom:

Central Square sedge meadow & red maple swamp:
5-27-09
Carex stricta
Cypripedium acaule
Cypripedium parviflorum
Rhamnus alnifolia
Geum rivale
Carex crinita
Cornus sericea
Photinia melanocarpa
Vaccinium corymbosum
Fertile fronds on Osmunda cinnamomea
Viola cucullata
Saxifraga pensylvanica

Nelson Swamp 5-25-09

Cypripedium parviflorum
Trillium cernuum
Mitella nuda
Mitella diphylla
Clintonia borealis
Aralia nudicalis
Maianthemum stellata & candensis
Calla palustris
Fertile fronds on Osmunda claytoniana
Viola cucullata
Saxifraga pensylvanica

Beaver Creek State Forest Fen: 5-28-09

Corallorhiza trifida
Geum rivale
Clintonia borealis
Mitella nuda
Saxifraga pensylvanica

Upcoming Wildflower Walks at the Mohonk Preserve, Ulster Co.

Posted May 28, 2009 by nyflora
Categories: Happenings

-Saturday, June 13th, 10am-12noon. Mountain Laurel Walk.
Join Reba Wynn Laks, Director, Stony Kill Farm Environmental Education Center, and take a walk to the Van Leuven Cabin and through the surrounding area to enjoy the peak of the Mountain Laurel blooms. We’ll check out some of the other wonderful blossoms and flowers along the way. Bring water and snacks. Ages 10 and up are welcome. Children must always be accompanied by an adult. This program includes an easy, 2-mile hike. Reservations are required; sign up begins 6/1/09. Call 845-255-0919 for reservations and meeting location.

–Thursday, June 25th, 10am-12noon. Mohonk Preserve Toddlers on the Trail – What’s Blooming?
Join Dana Rudikoff, a parent and enthusiastic hiker, and hike through the forest searching for Mountain Laurel and wildflowers. Ages 2-6 are welcome, accompanied by an adult. Children need to be able to walk or be in a carrier; jogging strollers cannot be used. Reservations are required and there is a 15 parent limit for this program. To register contact hike leader, Dana, by email at dana_rudikoff@yahoo.com. This program will begin at the West Trapps Trailhead and it is suggested that participants come early to secure a parking spot. Walks average 1.5 miles and move at a toddler’s pace. Please leave your pets at home.

Saturday, June 27th, 9;30am-12noon. Wild Plants of the Mohonk Preserve.
Aleese Cody, Herbalist and Mohonk Preserve Volunteer, will lead this program. The green plants of the Earth provide food, shelter, and the very air we breathe. Herbalist Aleese will introduce you to a variety of common plants found in the fields and forests of the Preserve and, quite possibly, in your own backyard. Learn the do’s and don’ts of plant cultivation, uses, and collection. Reminder: there is no collecting of any kind on Preserve lands. Bring a notepad, field guide, and camera. Ages 16 and up are welcome. Children must always be accompanied by an adult. This program includes an easy, 2-mile hike. Reservations are required; sign up begins 6/15/09. Call 845-255-0919 for reservations and meeting location.

Learn about more hikes at the Mohonk Preserve Website.

Why the Pitch Pines Are Turning Brown at Sam’s Point

Posted May 27, 2009 by nyflora
Categories: Ecology, Invasive Species

By Gabriel Chapin, Land Steward with the Shawangunk Ridge Program of the Nature Conservancy

It’s springtime again high atop the Shawangunk Ridge at Sam’s Point Preserve and everywhere you look, signs of summer are beginning to appear. Birds are singing, hardwoods are leafing out and azaleas are in bloom. But somewhere between the fading shadbush blossoms and the peak of mountain laurel season, another annual event has been taking place at Sam’s Point…the pines are turning brown. For the past several years at Sam’s Point Preserve, the browning up of over a thousand acres of dwarf pines has become a regular sign of the changing seasons. But what is causing it? The answer, as it turns out, lies within.

Deep inside each and every brown needle, a tiny caterpillar is eating away in preparation for its metamorphosis into a small, nondescript moth know as Exoteleia pinifoliella, the pine needleminer. Despite its deceptively small appearance, the pine needleminer can cause extensive damage, particularly evident at Sam’s Point Preserve in May and even into early June. After hatching from an egg in mid summer, the needleminer, as its name would imply, enters a healthy needle as a small caterpillar and gradually “mines” its way through the center. After overwintering in its cozy “mine”, the hungry larva awakens to feed through the following spring, eventually emerging as an adult in June.

Unlike nearly all of our most famous and devastating forest pests, including the gypsy moth, chestnut blight, Dutch elm disease, and the hemlock wooly adelgid, the pine needleminer is a native forest pest of the northeastern US and parts of Canada. This somewhat finicky caterpillar dines exclusively on “hard” pines, or those having clusters of fewer than five needles, and is particularly fond of both pitch pine and jack pine. Despite the harsh appearance of acres upon acres of browned trees, the pines have adapted to tolerate needleminer damage and few trees actually die. Although more severe infestations may be cyclical—possibly lasting for several years—climate and natural predators generally keep needleminer populations in check. Even after a few years of infestation, the most significant impacts are generally limited to reduced tree growth and greater susceptibility to other more serious pests like bark beetles.

Chemical pesticides can be used to control the pine needleminer in some instances, however, natural predators and other controls usually do the job. Non-native insects and tree diseases, including those mentioned above, have few natural enemies when they arrive on a new continent and native tree species have no defenses to ward off the new invaders. Because of this, non-native pests often cause profound and long lasting ecological damage. Although an extreme case, the chestnut blight nearly wiped out the most dominant and widespread tree in the eastern US in 40 years.

In contrast, periodic infestations by native pests such as the needleminer are part of a natural cycle of disturbance in our native forests that includes, among other things, wildfires, ice storms and hurricanes. Forests in the northeast have adapted to survive or recover from these “native” disturbances and, in some cases, forests may even depend on periodic disturbances like wildfire to maintain their health and vigor.

However, as we move into the 21st Century, global climate change may jeopardize this delicate ecological balance that has evolved over time. Some of the more obvious impacts of climate change—melting glaciers and the like—often mask more subtle changes, including increased wildfire activity and possibly even stronger hurricanes. Subtler still, warmer temperatures are contributing to widespread infestations of forest insects, including spruce bark beetles that have wiped out 4 million acres of spruce trees on Alaska’s Kenai Peninsula. Although naturally more lethal, the native spruce beetle was once limited by the very same factors hold the pine needleminer at bay.

The lesson that we repeatedly learn is that nature is a delicate balance of forces where subtle changes can combine to have profound cumulative impacts. Although the needleminer may not be a significant threat today, continued disruption of other natural process such as climate and wildfire may exacerbate the impacts of this seemingly benign moth. Maintaining the natural processes that keep forests healthy and resilient is the key to preserving our globally rare and treasured pitch pine forests in the Shawangunks.

Trip to Sam’s Point, Ulster County

Posted May 26, 2009 by nyflora
Categories: Plant Sightings

My family and I took a trip to Sam’s Point and the ice caves on Sunday morning. It was a beautiful drive from Ellenville up Route 52 to Cragsmoor Road and then a short drive to the visitor center run by The Nature Conservancy. We hiked the trails northeast to the ice caves but were dismayed by seeing acres of brown pitch pines. The Conservancy is in the process of finding out exactly what is going on. The following were seen in bloom along the trail:

Aralia nudicaulis – wild sarsaparilla
Gaylussacia baccata – black huckleberry
Maianthemum canadense – mayflower
Oxalis stricta – yellow wood sorrel
Photinia melanocarpa – black chokeberry
Potentilla simplex – common cinquefoil
Rhododendron canadense – rhodora
Rhododendron prinophyllum – hoary or mountain azalea
Sisyrinchium sp. – blue-eyed grass
Trientalis borealis – starflower
Trillium undulatum – painted trillium
Vaccinium angustifolium – early lowbush blueberry
Vaccinium corymbosum – highbush blueberry

– Steve Young

New Columbia County Natural History Survey Effort

Posted May 20, 2009 by nyflora
Categories: Happenings, Natural History, Plant Organizations

We invite your participation in a new research initiative of the Farmscape Ecology Program: a natural history survey of Columbia County. This project is envisioned as a many-year, many people on-going effort to document the plants and animals that share the county with us.

We’ll start small, with a workshop on Saturday, May 30, 1-5 at the Roeliff Jansen Park in Hillsdale. This workshop will give you a chance to meet the coordinators, Claudia Knab-Vispo (Plants), Conrad Vispo (Butterflies, Dragonflies, Ground Beetles), and Mike Pewtherer (Mammals), and to get a sneek preview of the methods we will be using to learn about and document some of the biodiversity in our landscape. At the end of the workshop, we hope to form three groups of volunteers who are interested in exploring the Roeliff Jansen Park (once a month for half a day, during 2009) and special places throughout the county (once a month for half a day) with us.

You need not have any prior knowledge, just a genuine love for nature and the curiosity and eagerness to learn!

Teenagers through seniors are welcome. We hope to form multi-age, multi-skill teams so that there will be a lot of learning from each other, as well.

Attached you find a more detailed description of the initiative as we envision it. Please contact us if you are interested or if you have any questions. Please contact us also if you would love to participate but can’t make the date for the initial workshop. Feel free to spread the word!

We are looking forward to seeing you soon,

Claudia Knab-Vispo
Farmscape Ecology Program
Hawthorne Valley Farm
327 Route 21C
Ghent, NY 12075
(518) 672-7500 Ext. 254 (office)
(518) 781-0243 (home)
fep@hawthornevalleyfarm.org
http://www.hawthornevalleyfarm.org

Hannacroix Ravine Plants in Flower on May 15, 2009

Posted May 19, 2009 by nyflora
Categories: What's Blooming

The Capital District Friday Field Group visited the TNC Hannacroix Ravine Preserve in Clarksville last Friday May 15, 2009. Bob Ingalls sent along this list of plants they saw in bloom.

Aquilegia canadensis – Columbine
Barbarea vulgaris – Yellow Rocket
Cardamine diphylla – Toothwort
Cardamine pensylvanica – PA bittercress
Carex communis – communal sedge
Carex deweyana – Dewey’s sedge
Carex gracillima -graceful sedge
Carex laxiflora – broad loose-flowered sedge
Carex pensylvanica – PA sedge
Carex playtphylla – broad-leaf sedge
Carex tonsa var tonsa – shaved sedge
Fragaria virginiana – strawberry
Geranium robertianum – herb Robert
Luzula campestris – common wood-rush
Maianthemum canadensis – mayflower
Maianthemum racemosum – false Solomon’s seal
Polygonatum pubescens – Solomon’s-seal
Prunus virginiana – chokecherry
Ranunculus abortivus – small-flowered crowfoot
Ranunculus recurvatus – hooked buttercup
Ribes cynosbati – wild gooseberry
Ribes rubrum – northern red currant
Sambucus racemosa ssp. pubens – red elderberry
Thalictrum dioicum – early meadow-rue
Tiarella cordifolia – foam flower
Viola conspersa – American dog violet
Viola pubescens – downy yellow violet
Viola rostrata – long-spurred violet
Viola saggitata – arrow-leaf violet
Viola sororia – common blue violet
Waldsteinia fragarioides – barren strawberry

Saratoga Woods and Waterways Blog

Posted May 18, 2009 by nyflora
Categories: Natural History, Plant Identification

Visit this beautiful blog about nature in Saratoga County by Jacqueline Donnelly of Saratoga Springs.
http://www.saratogawoodswaters.blogspot.com/