[MAIPC] FW: Microstegium versus Perilla, August 30 2020
Marc Imlay
ialm at erols.com
Sun Sep 13 07:46:38 PDT 2020
Thanks so much Wade. So how about us bringing back the native earthworms? Marc
From: Wade Simmons <wps42 at cornell.edu>
Sent: Sunday, September 13, 2020 9:47 AM
To: Marc Imlay <ialm at erols.com>
Subject: Re: [MAIPC] Microstegium versus Perilla, August 30 2020
Hi Marc,
Here's some Microstegium related evidence out of the lab group that I work with at Cornell.
Deer abundance may be promoting Microstegium and impacting native species recovery.
Two pieces of evidence:
1.) Microstegium densities decline within fenced areas over time
2.) Trillium performance is higher in microstegium sites fenced
And the most intriguing part is that deer impacts to plant communities may be mediated in part through non-native earthworms. Here's a fun figure showing how earthworm abundances relate to age of deer exclusion fences. Now that's an ecological mystery that is fun to hypothesize about!
Best,
Wade Simmons
Grad Student | Dept. of Natural Resources
Cornell Univeristy
On Fri, Sep 11, 2020 at 3:34 PM Marc Imlay <ialm at erols.com <mailto:ialm at erols.com> > wrote:
Japanese stiltgrass is easy to pull out unlike many of the native competitors. One reason it grows fast is because it puts it’s energy into growing fast rather than maintaining strong roots. So how can we change things so that the native competitors outcompete stiltgrass because they have stronger roots?
Marc Imlay, PhD Conservation biologist,
Board member of the Mid-Atlantic Exotic Pest Plant Council, ,
Natural Places Committee for the Maryland Chapter of the Sierra Club
From: James Remuzzi <james at sustainablesolutionsllc.net <mailto:james at sustainablesolutionsllc.net> >
Sent: Monday, August 31, 2020 12:01 PM
To: Marc Imlay <ialm at erols.com <mailto:ialm at erols.com> >
Cc: MAIPC <maipc at lists.maipc.org <mailto:maipc at lists.maipc.org> >
Subject: Re: [MAIPC] Microstegium versus Perilla, August 30 2020
We also noticed this in the field Marc.
For whatever reason- Perrilla seems to outcompete JSG.
James R. Remuzzi
President
c:202-746-1649
o:855-478-7824
f: 202-706-6063
<https://docs.google.com/a/sustainablesolutionsllc.net/uc?id=0Bynd-1KX8zwzOXhYczVrdHlDLTQ&export=download>
<http://sustainablesolutionsllc.net> sustainablesolutionsllc.net
On Mon, Aug 31, 2020 at 8:37 AM Marc Imlay <ialm at erols.com <mailto:ialm at erols.com> > wrote:
Microstegium versus Perilla
I came across a huge mono-culture of Japanese stiltgrass about 25% of an acre. In the middle of the patch was a monoculture patch of Beefsteak mint about 15 feet x 20 feet with almost no stiltgrass. There were two other beefsteak patches about 5 x 10 feet with no Microstegium. Is this just one non-native invasive outcompeting another one? Or is there another possibility that could be explored? For example, reintroduce Mentha arvenis. Any potential biocontrol?
Marc Imlay, PhD
Conservation biologist,
Board member of the Mid-Atlantic Exotic Pest Plant Council,
,
Natural Places Committee
for the Maryland Chapter of the Sierra Club.
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