Invasive Plants defined

Definition from Plantlife International:

At the end of the last ice age, and up until around 8,000 years ago, Britain was connected to the rest of Europe by land. Plants and animals moved north as the ice retreated, taking advantage of new habitats available to them. When the land bridge was flooded most plant species would no longer arrive in Britain of their own accord, but would rely on being brought here by people. This ‘closure’ of the land bridge is the widely-accepted cut off point for determining which plants are native and which are considered to be non-native.

‘Non-natives’: Plants that were brought to Britain by people, either intentionally, including crops and ornamental garden plants, or unintentionally, for example by being inadvertently mixed with crop seeds.

Within this ‘non-native’ category it is common to distinguish between plants brought to Britain before 1500 AD (called archaeophytes – literally ‘ancient plants’) or after 1500 AD (neophytes – literally ‘new plants’).

This distinction roughly correlates (in Europe at least) with the rise of long-distance cross-oceanic trade. In other words, when species started to be moved frequently across biogeographical barriers. So the plants and animals brought to Britain by the Romans and the Normans are archaeophytes, whereas those brought here from the Americas or the Far East are neophytes.

Archaeophytes include many arable plants that have declined substantially in Britain in recent years. Neophytes include many widely-cultivated garden plants. People who are concerned about non-native invasive species are usually most worried about neophytes. One reason for this is the breaching of those biogeographical barriers, and so the increased likelihood that native species will have no coping strategies to deal with the newcomers.

Another reason people are particularly wary of neophytes is the lag effect commonly displayed by non-native invasive plants. Non-native invasive plants are often present in Britain for several years before ‘taking off’ and beginning to cause problems. Neophytes are more likely to still be in a lag phase than archaeophytes.

Parrot's feather

‘Non-native invasives’: Some plants grow rapidly, can produce many thousands of seeds, or can reproduce without seeds. They can colonize a habitat and quickly ‘take over’, displacing native plants by smothering them, out-competing them for resources, or even poisoning the soil around them so that other types of plants can no longer grow there.

Most non-native plants are not invasive and pose no threat to the countryside. Plantlife has no desire to stop people selling, buying, using or growing these plants. What we are concerned about is the small number of ‘non-native invasive’ plants that cost both the environment and the economy dear.

So why do some plants become invasive?

Three key groups of factors commonly combine to enable a plant to become invasive:

1) In their natural ranges, invasive plants are often common but not problematic. Their extent is limited by pressures placed on them – for example from herbivores and fungal diseases. When plants are placed in a new environment, these containing pressures are rarely transported too, giving the new plants an advantage over native plants which are still affected by pathogens and herbivores.

2) Invasive plants often have characteristics such as fast growth, prolific seed production and/or an ability to spread vegetatively (without the need for seeds), an ability to tolerate wide ranges of growing conditions (soil types or water pH, for example), and a range of ways in which seeds can be spread locally and over larger distances (say, by wind, water or animals). People are often instrumental in spreading invasive plants.

3) The environment that the new plant is placed in is in some way disturbed or damaged, providing the opportunity to invade. For example, in polluted water systems, more nutrients are available than can be used by the native plants present, giving the invading plants an opportunity to get established.

Exmoor Wild Ponies enlisted as horticulture specialists

I saw wild Exmoor Ponies, a feral breed of horse, up on the moors near High Green. They’ve been brought here from Devon in a land management scheme – eating invasive grasses and bracken in the hope that rarer wildflowers will flourish. They also don’t touch the heather.

Exmoor ponies are a hardy breed who have for centuries survived in a harsh and sometimes treacherous landscape. These fascinating, half-wild creatures have gentle looks and a willing nature, they are descended from wild horses domesticated by the Celts of pre-Roman times and are now conserved as a ‘rare breed’. (Pictures of England)

Exmoor Ponies at HIgh Green, Northumberland
Exmoor Ponies at HIgh Green, Northumberland

Livestock break up the soil for wildflowers to seed into and the Exmoor ponies are ideal for this as they are environmentally friendly and less destructive than large machinery, will eat the most vigorous and inhospitable plants such as gorse and can penetrate the smallest and most remote locations.

Exmoor ponies are classified by the WWF-UK as “critically endangered” due to their dramatically decline in numbers since the 2nd World War.  The ponies to be used at Kielder will be used on grazing schemes for the next few years until they are old enough to be sold as family ponies – their places will then be taken by another group of younger ponies in the scheme. (Northumberland Wildlife Trust)

Like the wild cattle, if you stay long enough they tend to be curious and will come right up to you to inspect.  They’re lovely, with coloration that looks like it got rubbed away in places.

Christopher Smart

Fashion swings this way and that, with regard to the construction of nature on offer – its pendulum swung farther towards novel or traditional.  Currently, the  tastemakers want indigenous, and are beginning to pay well for green (privileged locavores and nationalized tree planting subsidizers, to name two user groups willing to cough up the surcharge).

I found this quote from Christopher Smart in Keith Thomas’ Man and the Natural World: Changing Attitudes in England 1500-1800:

“I pray God for the introduction of new creatures into this island,” Christopher Smart would sing, “For I pray God for the ostriches of Salisbury plain. the beavers of the Medway and silver fish of Thames.”

(from Jubilate Agno)

England poised for further invasion!!

It’s a fever.. of xenophobia:

An army of foreign mammals, birds and amphibians is poised to invade Britain – changing the countryside and threatening our best-loved native wildlife, scientists warn.

They have identified 84 exotic species – from the raccoon to the snapping turtle – which could become established within the next few decades.

Some, like the leopard cat, could escape from zoos or private collections, while others, such as the eagle owl, are already living in isolated pockets of the countryside.

from the “Raccoons and Snapping Turtle Join  the Foreign Threat to our Native Wildlife,” Daily Mail, May 2009

article-0-001e4e0800000258-705_224x362article-0-050b621e000005dc-475_468x364

the operative word is could