by Irene Shonle CSU Extension Gilpin County
Why are there some weeds, such as
List A noxious weeds myrtle spurge, orange hawkweed, and others, required by
state law to be eradicated? The answer
is long and complicated. First, we must start with what makes a weed a noxious weed
– it is a plant that is alien (not from this country) that has been shown to
cause problems in natural or agricultural settings. To be declared noxious, they have
to be proven bad actors, and only after scientists have reviewed the data, and
it has passed through a legislative process. It is not just “someone’s”
opinion. Because these weeds are not
from here, they do not deal with the same suite of insects and diseases that
our native plants have to deal with, so they have a competitive advantage. They
usually have a nasty tendency to form monocultures and crowd out native plants.
This is certainly the case with myrtle spurge (and most other noxious weeds);
if it is left alone, it will take over large areas over time.
Hillside filled with myrtle spurge, a List A noxious weed |
Next, we must look at the relative
benefit to the ecosystem of native plants and alien plants. Doug Tallamy, a professor from the University
of Delaware (author of Bringing Nature
Home), has been studying how native plants support the entire food chain and
how alien plants do so to a much lesser degree.
His definition of a native plant is a functional one: "a plant that has
evolved in a particular place long enough to be able to establish the
specialized relationships that create an ecosystem". Noxious weeds, by virtue of being alien, are
newcomers to the area, and do not have these relationships.
Natives in nature |
One of the reasons we are seeing a
sad decline in bird populations (overall, 40 percent of the world’s 11,000 bird
species are in decline, according to the 2018 State of the World’s Birds report)
is because so many of our plants around us are now not native – either noxious
weeds or beloved garden plants. Almost all birds, even if the adults are seed
eaters or fruit eaters, require thousands of insects to raise even one clutch
of birds.
Myrtle Spurge up close, Colorado List A noxious weed |
Weeds such as myrtle spurge may
have pollinator visitation, but they occupy space that would otherwise be used
by native plants which provide pollinator services AND are host plants for many
different insects. Also, research from
the Xerces Society shows that native plants are four times more likely to
attract native bees than exotics – and native bees are also suffering declines,
even though the non-native honeybees get all the press. So, while it may seem
on the surface that removing one plant would reduce biodiversity (we all know
basic subtraction, right?), the natives do a much better job of supporting the myriad
insects and birds that depend on them.
In fact, Tallamy’s research shows alien plants support 29 times less
biodiversity than do native plants.
Orange Hawkweed, Colorado List A noxious weed |
The next question is why does the
law state that list A weeds must be eradicated? This is because these weeds
have relatively small populations so far in the state. That means we should not
have to expend a lot of time and effort in bringing these weeds under control
if we act now. It also means that we probably don’t have to do a great deal of
remediation afterwards, because their populations aren’t that large; the native
vegetation will be able to take over again with little to no intervention. We
don’t want to leave pockets of these weeds around, because those populations
would spread into new areas (they are weeds, after all), and weed managers
would continuously have to be putting out these small (or sometimes large)
fires. Sure, we could wait until a weed like myrtle spurge gets as bad here as
it is in Utah: “we waited too long and this thing is now incredibly entrenched,
and there just doesn’t seem to be an answer,” according to Utah Native Plant
Society’s Tony Frates in reference to the huge monocultures that have formed in
the Wasatch. Then we would have lost our window of opportunity.
List A weeds are sort of like a
disease – in a perfect world, we would be able to completely eradicate diseases
such as we have done with small pox, rather than dealing with the trauma and
loss of life of epidemics, and rather than continuously having to vaccinate
against them. If we can deal with these
weeds now while their populations are still small, we don’t have to worry about
them coming back, and we can spend time and energy on either dealing with some
of the other weeds, or habitat restoration, or some other productive use. That
is why some weeds are required by law to be eradicated.
Irene Shonle is the County Extension Agent at the CSU Gilpin County Extension Office located at
the Exhibit Barn in Gilpin County. For more information, visit www.gilpin.extension.colostate.edu.
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