[MAIPC] A conjecture on invasive vines and tree falls

Jil Swearingen jilswearingen at gmail.com
Thu Mar 22 06:21:06 PDT 2018


In addition to Steve's suggested "ghost impacts," I'll offer more
conjecturing.

Based on personal observations over the past several decades, that are not
backed up by hard science, I have watched trees heavily covered with
English ivy vines deteriorate over time, lose most of their branches and
structure and then die. At some point, even if vines are cut and killed at
the base, it is too late to rescue a smothered tree. The tree is too weak
to recover. Physically, the heavy growth and dense foliage (mini umbrellas)
of English ivy blocks sunlight for the host tree foliage, leads to reduced
photosynthesis and growth in the host tree, reduced water availability for
the host tree (the vines get most of the water that would otherwise be
available to the tree), and the vines probably cause some level of damage
to the bark which could lead to increased vulnerability to insect pests and
pathogens.

We have identified lots of factors to be studied. Now we just need someone
to do the research.

Jil

Jil Swearingen
Invasive Species Consultant
*In the Weeds*



On Wed, Mar 21, 2018 at 9:27 PM, Ruth Douglas <cvilleruth at embarqmail.com>
wrote:

> I’m going to try to contact someone in VDOT (Va. Dept. of Transportation)
> and someone at Virginia Power to see if anyone there is looking at the role
> of invasive vines in trees down in storms.
>
>
>
> Ruth Douglas
>
> Invasive Plant Educator, VNPS
>
>
>
> *From:* MAIPC [mailto:maipc-bounces at lists.maipc.org] *On Behalf Of *Nathan
> Hartshorne
> *Sent:* Wednesday, March 21, 2018 6:41 PM
> *To:* frazmo
> *Cc:* MAIPC Listserve (maipc at lists.maipc.org)
> *Subject:* Re: [MAIPC] A conjecture on invasive vines and tree falls
>
>
>
> Perhaps the previous ivy spread had stopped development of an understory
> that would have helped prevent windthrow since the gaps in a forest can
> help facilitate it.
>
>
>
> On Wed, Mar 21, 2018 at 5:32 PM, frazmo <frazmo at gmail.com> wrote:
>
> Continuing from the recent thread, it seems intuitively obvious that the
> weight and windload burden of invasive vine growth would cause mature trees
> to be more vulnerable to high winds. But I also conjecture that non-native
> invasive vines may have "ghost" impacts even when they have been removed.
> Based on personal observations at Long Branch Nature Center in Arlington
> VA, we have lost dozens of mature trees due to wind storms from Hurricane
> Isabel (2003) to now. My sense is that a disproportionate fraction fell in
> areas that had been heavily blanketed in English Ivy growth circa pre-2004.
>
> Even though the ivy had been removed, the trees fell. The conjecture is
> that the invasives' growth had altered soil characteristics and tree root
> growth patterns in ways that left the trees more vulnerable going forward.
>
> I agree that this whole area seems like a great topic for research and
> this is just one more angle to consider. Cheers,
>
> Steve Young, volunteer, Arlington VA
>
>
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