Jason Berard
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- Oct 28, 2006
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Generally speaking, I'd say I am a supporter of the idea that some places on the map ought to be left alone, as untouched by the human hands as possible. At least going forward. We all know that the areas that are designated WIlderness in the Whites have all been impacted heavily in the past by extensive logging.
I've been spending a fair bit of time at work this year doing outreach work in the community on invasive plants. We have a terrible time around here with several invasive plants. The one I have been doing the most work on is buckthorn. If you have even been in a mature forest, where the entire understory is buckthorn, it is a seriously depressing sight. Buckthorn isn't good for critters. It just gives them "intestinal distress" and they crap out the seeds not far from where they ate them. Ultimately it forms a monoculture below the mature trees. The plants on the forest floor die out, because they get starved for light as the trees grow. The rest of the native saplings can't compete, because they leaf out later, and drop leaves earlier, and produce less seeds. If you are managing your forest for timber, and you see that these invasive plants are present, you make darned sure you get them under control before you harvest in an area, or you'll end up with a sea of buckthorn.
What I am beginning to realize, is that the forests that are unmanaged are often the ones where the invasives take over. So, my question is in two parts:
1. I imagine that invasives aren't a pervasive issue in the Whites yet, even at lower elevations, but does anyone know if/where there are pockets of invasives?
2. If invasives get going in Wilderness areas, what sorts of techniques will the FS be able to use to combat them? Would a backpack sprayer with glyphosate be allowed in a WIlderness area? Would they have to resort to hand pulling?
This occurred to me recently when I got involved pulling buckthorn, barberry and honeysuckle by hand from a 3 acre parcel in the Upper Valley. So far, we have about 2 acres cleared of invasives, and it has taken about 300 person hours to accomplish!
How many acres are designated WIlderness in New England?
I guess the best bet would be to control the invasives before they become ensconced in the Wilderness areas.
I've been spending a fair bit of time at work this year doing outreach work in the community on invasive plants. We have a terrible time around here with several invasive plants. The one I have been doing the most work on is buckthorn. If you have even been in a mature forest, where the entire understory is buckthorn, it is a seriously depressing sight. Buckthorn isn't good for critters. It just gives them "intestinal distress" and they crap out the seeds not far from where they ate them. Ultimately it forms a monoculture below the mature trees. The plants on the forest floor die out, because they get starved for light as the trees grow. The rest of the native saplings can't compete, because they leaf out later, and drop leaves earlier, and produce less seeds. If you are managing your forest for timber, and you see that these invasive plants are present, you make darned sure you get them under control before you harvest in an area, or you'll end up with a sea of buckthorn.
What I am beginning to realize, is that the forests that are unmanaged are often the ones where the invasives take over. So, my question is in two parts:
1. I imagine that invasives aren't a pervasive issue in the Whites yet, even at lower elevations, but does anyone know if/where there are pockets of invasives?
2. If invasives get going in Wilderness areas, what sorts of techniques will the FS be able to use to combat them? Would a backpack sprayer with glyphosate be allowed in a WIlderness area? Would they have to resort to hand pulling?
This occurred to me recently when I got involved pulling buckthorn, barberry and honeysuckle by hand from a 3 acre parcel in the Upper Valley. So far, we have about 2 acres cleared of invasives, and it has taken about 300 person hours to accomplish!
How many acres are designated WIlderness in New England?
I guess the best bet would be to control the invasives before they become ensconced in the Wilderness areas.