LeeAnna Young Leanne Penry Liz Montgomery Johnathan Sutton John Atkinson

14
LeeAnna Young Leanne Penry Liz Montgomery Johnathan Sutton John Atkinson Exotic Invasive Vegetation

description

LeeAnna Young Leanne Penry Liz Montgomery Johnathan Sutton John Atkinson. Exotic Invasive Vegetation. Why is monitoring exotic invasive vegetation important?. Consumes resources: Light Water Nutrients Growing space. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of LeeAnna Young Leanne Penry Liz Montgomery Johnathan Sutton John Atkinson

Page 1: LeeAnna Young Leanne Penry Liz Montgomery Johnathan Sutton John Atkinson

LeeAnna Young

Leanne Penry

Liz Montgomery

Johnathan Sutton

John Atkinson

Exotic Invasive Vegetation

Page 2: LeeAnna Young Leanne Penry Liz Montgomery Johnathan Sutton John Atkinson

Why is monitoring exotic invasive vegetation important?

Consumes resources:

•Light•Water•Nutrients•Growing space

The H. John Heinz III Center for Science, Economics and the Environment, 2008

Page 3: LeeAnna Young Leanne Penry Liz Montgomery Johnathan Sutton John Atkinson

• Indicator of conservation success

• Invasion of natural ecosystems

• Competition with native vegetation

Why is monitoring exotic invasive vegetation important to TLC?

Page 4: LeeAnna Young Leanne Penry Liz Montgomery Johnathan Sutton John Atkinson

• To create a method for measuring the extent of exotic invasive vegetation.

• To make this method user-friendly and repeatable for volunteers of the Triangle Land Conservancy.

• Demonstrate how our method can be used in several test areas, including riparian areas in NCSU main campus, Centennial Campus, and Schenck Forest.

Objectives

Page 5: LeeAnna Young Leanne Penry Liz Montgomery Johnathan Sutton John Atkinson

Display Condition of Single Site

Page 6: LeeAnna Young Leanne Penry Liz Montgomery Johnathan Sutton John Atkinson

Compare Among Sites

Page 7: LeeAnna Young Leanne Penry Liz Montgomery Johnathan Sutton John Atkinson

Our Method is Repeatable

Page 8: LeeAnna Young Leanne Penry Liz Montgomery Johnathan Sutton John Atkinson

Simple Materials

• Rope with pre-measured lengths (2m, 5m) and stake attached• Clipboard with data sheet, percent cover card, and plot layout• Diameter tape (record units on data sheet) • Metric tape measure (100m)

Page 9: LeeAnna Young Leanne Penry Liz Montgomery Johnathan Sutton John Atkinson
Page 10: LeeAnna Young Leanne Penry Liz Montgomery Johnathan Sutton John Atkinson
Page 11: LeeAnna Young Leanne Penry Liz Montgomery Johnathan Sutton John Atkinson
Page 12: LeeAnna Young Leanne Penry Liz Montgomery Johnathan Sutton John Atkinson

Recommendations

• Data collected can be evaluated over time to determine increases or decreases in exotic invasive vegetation per site

• Exotic invasive species identification training session for volunteers

• Survey when species are most visible

Page 13: LeeAnna Young Leanne Penry Liz Montgomery Johnathan Sutton John Atkinson

Common: Multiflora roseScientific: Rosa multiflora

• Alternate leaf arrangements (one leaf with 5 leaflets in picture)

• 5-11 leaflets per leaf• Leaf edges serrated• White flowers with 5 petals

bloom in early summer• Thorn-like prickles on stems• Long arching stems, can be

vine-like

ROMU

The University of Georgia Center for Invasive Species and Ecosystem Health. (2009). Invasive.org: Invasive and Exotic Species to North America. Retrieved Apr., 2009, from http://www.invasive.org/

Page 14: LeeAnna Young Leanne Penry Liz Montgomery Johnathan Sutton John Atkinson

Conclusion

• Method is repeatable and user-friendly• Method can be adjusted to accommodate

different cover types• Comparing data over time will alert TLC to

exotic invasive vegetation problems• Early detection allows for intervention