Success stories: Tales of improving our native biodiversity
Tunyalee Martin/GIST
January 2001
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The Setting
The Lanphere Dunes Unit of the Humboldt Bay National Wildlife Refuge is the
largest remaining stand of pristine coastal dunes in the Pacific Northwest.
Many dunefields on the Pacific coast have already been destroyed by industrial
and residential development and others are threatened by recreational impacts,
such as the use of off-road vehicles.
The Lanphere Dunes have been restored to protect coastal sand dune habitats and species. The dune mat community is home to the native dunegrass, Leymus mollis subsp. mollis. Once found along the coast as far south as Morro Bay in California, this native grass now occurs in only two places along the California coast, Point Reyes and Lanphere Dunes. Other inhabitants include the federally and state listed endangered Humboldt Bay wallflower, Erysimum menziesii subsp. eurekense, which is endemic to Humboldt Bay, and the beach layia, Layia carnosa. The rare pink sand-verbena, Abronia umbellata subsp. breviflora, and the threatened Western Snowy Plover, Charadrius alexandrinus subsp. nivosus, also occupy the Dunes.
The Invader - European Beachgrass (Ammophila arenaria)
European beachgrass invades coastal dunes on the Pacific coast and can
change dune morphology and hydrology significantly. Dunes that form under
cover of native beachgrasses and forbs have low slopes perpendicular to the
beach. Infestations of A. arenaria trap more sand than the native
species and consequently dunes that form under its cover have steeper
slopes and are aligned nearly parallel to the shoreline. This change in
dune morphology and topography prevents the movement of sand from the beach
to interior dunes and disrupts conditions that support native plant
communities. These changes also tend to promote A. arenaria so that
it becomes more and more dominant while species richness declines sharply
until nearly pure stands of A. arenaria form.
A Success Story
European beachgrass had invaded a roughly 10 acre area at the Lanphere
Dunes by 1990. In 1992, an intensive monitoring and removal program was
initiated. The area was mapped on a GIS (Geographic Information System)
and 4.7 acres were designated for treatment. A. arenaria stands
were cleared manually. First, workers dug out A. arenaria bunches
and used their shovels to sever its rhizomes 4 inches (20 cm) below the soil
surface. Later, resprouts were removed using a hand trowel. Treated areas
were revisited and A. arenaria resprouts pulled an average of eight
times from February to December the first year. The second year, plants
were pulled an average of seven times between March and December. By this
time, the density of resprouts had dropped and the native plant cover was
returning. On the primary foredune, the A. arenaria stands were
extremely vigorous and resprouts in this area required a third year of
treatment. Treatment of the remaining 5.4 acres was successfully complete
in 1997.
The entire 10 acre infestation of European beachgrass has now been eliminated. Annual monitoring and manual removal, although time consuming and expensive, eradicated this invasive weed from the Lanphere Dunes. It was estimated that 2,951 person-hours/acre (ph/A) was the labor necessary for the initial three years of control at the dunes. The majority (2,108 ph/A) was in the first year. The second and third year required 723 ph/A and 120 ph/A respectively. A large proportion of the cost (roughly a third) was due to transportation costs because of the remoteness of the area.
The elimination of A. arenaria is a success story for the Lanphere Dunes Unit. After initiating restoration in 1992, native plant cover increased 47% by 1997 without the assistance of active re-planting. Best of all, the successful control of European beachgrass inspired other agencies managing similar dune areas to remove European beachgrass and begin restoration of this heavily impacted, yet distinctive community.
More Information
For more information, contact Andrea Pickart at 707-822-6378 or
andrea_pickart(at)mail.fws.gov. The Lanphere Dunes project and dune
restoration on the U.S. Pacific coast are described in a book authored
by A.J. Pickart and J.O. Sawyer, titled Ecology and Restoration of
Northern California Coastal Dunes, and published in 1998 by the California
Native Plant Society (Sacramento, California). A chapter with information
on the ecology and control of Ammophila arenaria is included in the
book titled Invasive Plants of California's Wildlands published in 2000 and
edited by C.C. Bossard, J.M. Randall, and M.C. Hoshovsky.
A review article with more detailed information about European beachgrass, including a description of its diagnostic characteristics, range, ecology, and methods for its control, is available on the TNC Wildland Invasive Species Team website.
References
1998-1999 TNC Weed Report, Ammophila arenaria, European beach grass.
Invasive Species Team, TNC, CA.
Danin, A., S. Rae, M. Barbour, and N. Jurjavcic. 1998. Early primary
succession on dunes at Bodega head, California. Madrono 45(2):
101-109.
Pavlik, B.M. 1983. Nutrient and productivity relations of the dune
grasses Ammophila arenaria and Elymus mollis I. Blade
photosynthesis and nitrogen use efficiency in the laboratory and field.
Oecologia 57:227-232.
Pickart, A., US Fish and Wildlife Service, Humboldt Bay National Wildlife
Refuge, Lanphere Dunes Unit. Personal communication.
2000. Ammophila arenaria. In: Invasive Plants of California's
Wildlands. C.C. Bossard, J.M. Randall, and M.C. Hoshovsky (eds.).
University of California Press, Berkeley, CA. pp. 42-46.
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This article may be treated as a press release and may be quoted by the media in part or in full. Publication quality versions of images on this page can be obtained from the Wildland Invasive Species Team by sending email to bamrice(at)ucdavis.edu.