Tag Archives: land stewardship

NEON Citizen Science Academy

NEON Citizen Science Academy
Registration is Open NOW for the Fall Session

http://www.citizenscienceacademy.org/registration

Would you like your students to become Citizen Scientists and learn about phenology and climate issues? Learn how with NEON’s Citizen Science Academy.

The NEON Citizen Science Academy offers facilitated self-paced online courses for K-12 Formal and Informal educators wanting to incorporate citizen science into their educational programs. Courses run approximately 1 month.

CSA 501/551 “Introduction to Project BudBurst for Educators”
Provides an overview to support implementation of Project BudBurst in a variety of educational venues. CSA 501 is geared for Formal (K-12) and community college educators. CSA 551 is intended for Informal Educators.

CSA 502 “Working with Project BudBurst Data in an Informal/Formal Education Setting”
The follow-up course in which educators learn how to use the new National Geographic Field Scope tools to visualize and analyze Project BudBurst data through a user-friendly, web-based interface. It will also cover plant adaptations to a changing climate, and links between Project BudBurst data and other broadscale data sets. This course is offered in one section that considers both formal and informal educational objectives.

Fall Term (September 17 – October 16, 2003)
* CSA 501/551: Introduction to Project BudBurst (Formal / Informal Educators)
* CSA 502: Working with Project BudBurst Data in an Informal / Formal Education Setting

Course fee: $35
Each course is limited to 50 participants.

For those interested in teacher re-certification, all of our courses can be taken for 2 optional, graduate level continuing education credits from Colorado School of Mines. The fee for 2 optional credits is $90.

Questions? Email: CSAregistrar@neoninc.org
Register at http://www.citizenscienceacademy.org/registration

MIPN Aquatic Fact Sheets

MIPN has put together several new aquatic invasive plant fact sheets. Fact sheets for the plants listed on our Aquatic Invasive Plants in the Midwest Flyer are included. Check them out on our Early Detection Rapid Response webpage!

Brazilian waterweed (Egeria densa)
Brittle waternymph (Najas minor)
Eurasian watermilfoil (Myriophyllum spicatum)
European frogbit (Hydrocharis morsus-ranae)
European water clover (Marsilea quadrifolia)
Hydrilla (Hydrilla verticillata)
Indian swampweed (Hygrophila polysperma)
Parrot feather (Myriophyllum aquaticum)
Pond water-starwort (Callitriche stagnalis)
Reed manna grass (Glyceria maxima)
Swamp stone crop (Crassula helmsii)
Water chestnut (Trapa natans)
Water hyacinth (Eichhornia crassipes)
Water lettuce (Pistia stratiotes)
Yellow floating hearts (Nymphoides peltata)

Remember you can support MIPN’s work by becoming a member today!

Lara Vallely
Midwest Invasive Plant Network
lvallely@purdue.edu

Hydrilla Hunt!

Hydrilla Hunt! program solicits help of lake and river enthusiasts to discover invasive aquatic plant.

GLENCOE, Ill. (June 17, 2013) – Boaters, anglers, swimmers, and others who enjoy Illinois’ lakes and rivers are keeping their eyes peeled this summer for an aquatic “superweed.” Through the Hydrilla Hunt! program, citizen volunteers are on the lookout for a highly invasive aquatic plant named Hydrilla verticillata, or simply “hydrilla.”

Recognized as one of the world’s worst weeds, hydrilla can grow an inch per day and form dense mats of vegetation at the water surface. Within the past few years, hydrilla has been discovered in Wisconsin and Indiana and it is expected to arrive in Illinois very soon. Our desirable native aquatic plants, sport fishing, native wildlife, waterfront property values, and recreational uses might all be seriously impacted.

“Early detection of hydrilla could save Illinois millions of dollars in control costs,” noted Cathy McGlynn, coordinator for the Northeast Illinois Invasive Plant Partnership (NIIPP). “Experience from other states shows that once a waterway becomes infested with hydrilla, it’s nearly impossible to control. Our hope in Illinois is to identify the plant at a very early stage when populations are still small enough to eradicate and manage,” added McGlynn.

The strain of hydrilla that has been found in the northern United States is believed to have originated in Korea. It grows on mucky as well as sandy bottoms of lakes and rivers, and from very shallow water to depths of 20 feet or more. It can be spotted snagged on fishing lines or on boat anchors, or by noting plants seen while boating or growing along the sides of a pier. Hydrilla spreads quickly, since just a small stem fragment of hydrilla can sprout roots and grow into a whole new plant.

Anyone can participate in the Hydrilla Hunt! program. Volunteers are encouraged to take a more detailed look at aquatic plants they encounter while out and about on Illinois’ waterways. A Hydrilla Identification Sheet (available for download at the program’s website, see below) can be used to differentiate hydrilla from look-alike plants such as Brazilian elodea and American elodea. Volunteers who suspect they may have found hydrilla are asked to take several digital photographs and email them to the Hydrilla Hunt! program for verification.

For more information, including how to become a Hydrilla Hunt! volunteer, a Hydrilla Identification Sheet, fact sheets, and other resources, visit www.niipp.net/hydrilla. The Hydrilla Hunt! program is coordinated by the Northeast Illinois Invasive Plant Partnership, the Chicago Botanic Garden, and the Lake County Health Department-Lakes Management Unit. Funding support has been provided by the Illinois Department of Natural Resources through the Illinois-Indiana Sea Grant.

Thank you for your help spreading the word!

Cathy McGlynn

Sericea lespedeza Case Study Added to MIPN Control Database

Today, we are happy to add a case study for the use of escort on sericea lespedeza with very high effectiveness one year after treatment. Go to http://mipncontroldatabase.wisc.edu/.

After you see what kind of information people are posting please add your own experience with whatever species you have been working with. Tell everyone about what techniques and treatments are really working for you or tell us about what isn’t working for you so that we don’t waste time and money attempting the same technique.

The Great Lakes Early Detection Network makes reporting invasive species even easier with new smartphone app.

The Great Lakes Early Detection Network (GLEDN) in collaboration with the Early Detection Distribution and Mapping System (EDDMapS) has developed a smartphone app for the iPhone and Android operating systems. This app allows users to report invasive species found in the Midwest to GLEDN and EDDMapS from their phones or tablets.

The app uses the device’s GPS and camera capabilities to geo-locate the reported species and allow the device’s operator to provide a photo of the reported species. Pictures allow verifiers to quickly confirm observations. Once confirmed, observations will be visible on maps found on GLEDN (www.gledn.org ) and EDDMaps (www.eddmaps.org ) websites and sent to land managers through each group’s early alert system. Using this technology we hope to enhance the ability of groups’ to respond to these new pests as they are emerging.

You can download the free app from this site: http://apps.bugwood.org/mobile/gledn.html.

Join others in contributing to a growing regional database of invasive species locations. Your contributions help agency staff, scientists, and policy makers in efforts to curb the threat from invasive species and help raise public awareness.

For more information about this new technology please contact:

Brendon Panke (GLEDN Coordinator): (608) 262-9570; bjpanke@wisc.edu
Kate Howe (MIPN Coordinator): (317) 829 3812; howek@purdue.edu

Mark Renz: President of MIPN and Director of GLEDN

GLEDN is an online database that allows users to enter invasive species reports without requiring a log-in. All reports entered into GLEDN are verified by experts. The database offers more tools for those who choose to create a log-in, including new invasive location alerts, mapping, and data downloading. Visit the site at http://www.gledn.org.

Funding for the development of this app was provided by the Ohio State University and Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources Citizen Science Monitoring program.

Ohio River Basin Hydrilla Workshop

The Ohio River Basin Fish Habitat Partnership is currently working in cooperation with the Central Hardwoods Invasive Plant Network (CHIP-N), an informal partnership between the Appalachian Ohio Weed Control Partnership (Ohio), River to River Cooperative Weed Management Area (Illinois), and Southern Indiana Cooperative Invasive Management (Indiana), on control and management of invasive plant species in the Ohio River Basin, with a focus on hydrilla. Eric Boyda is planning to host a meeting to further identify and discuss control and management methods for hydrilla on the Ohio River. The Ohio River is a complex system, and will have to consider a variety of issues to implement control methods. We hope this meeting will build a foundation for a document that compiles the issues, discussions, literature related to the management of hydrilla on the Ohio River that can be utilized to assist in the creation of management recommendations and identify research needs.

Registration for the meeting can be sent to Eric Boyda at appalachianohioweeds@gmail.com or calling 740-534-6578.

Time

Wednesday June 26th, 9:00 am – 3:30 pm

Location

The meeting will be held at the Thomas Moore College Biology Field Station Conference Center, California, Kentucky. The address is 8309 Mary Ingles Highway, California, KY 41007. (It is located about 25 miles southeast of Cincinnati on the Ohio River.) Additional information can be found at www.thomasmore.edu/fieldstation

The conference center can hold 50 people. The room has capabilities to WebEx with up to 25 additional people (remote access would only need a webcam to join, a link to join the meeting would be sent out before we started). Registration for the meeting can be sent to Eric Boyda at appalachianohioweeds@gmail.com or calling 740-534-6578.

On-Site Lodging

Onsite: There are 12 dorm rooms available for attendees at the Biology Field Station. Each room has a bunk bed & dresser. You may reserve a room for $30/night as a single room or for $20/night as a double room. (Guests must provide their own blankets and towels. Sheets and pillows are available.)  To reserve a room, contact the Field Station Director, Chris Lorentz, at chris.lorentz@thomasmore.eduor 859-344-3373.  Rooms can also be reserved directly online at: http://thomasmore.edu/fieldstation/room_reserve.cfm  

Nearby Hotels: There are two nearby hotels, both in Wilder, KY: a Country Inn and Hampton Inn. They are just about 10 miles away from the Station and right off of I-275, the major beltway around Greater Cincinnati. The links to each are below. There are also plenty of restaurants nearby.

Meeting

We intend to have the meeting be predominately discussion based, but will have several speakers give powerpoint presentations on key issues.

Dr. Michael Netherland is a Research Biologist for the U.S. Army Engineer Research and Development Center (ERDC) in Gainesville, Florida.  He researched impacts of plant growth regulators on hydrilla and Eurasian watermilfoil while pursuing a Master’s degree at Purdue University.  Upon graduation in 1989, Mike took a research position with ERDC in Vicksburg, MS, and worked on improving the linkage between the biology of invasive submersed plants and various herbicide management strategies.  In 1999 Mike earned a Ph.D. from the University of Florida with research focusing on the biology and management of hydrilla with an emphasis on how ecology of the turions can influence management outcomes.  Mike went to work in private industry for the SePRO Corporation in Carmel, IN and managed aquatic research projects from 1999 to 2003.  In December 2003, he returned to the ERDC and was stationed at the University of Florida Center for Aquatic and Invasive Plants in Gainesville, FL.  His current research focuses on factors that influence hydrilla growth, improved understanding of monoecious hydrilla biology and phenology, and development of novel management strategies for both the dioecious and monoecious biotypes of hydrilla.  Mike was Editor of the Journal of Aquatic Plant Management from 2004 through 2010 and he is currently President Elect of the Aquatic Plant Management Society.

Dr. Greg Cope is a Professor and Extension Leader in the Department of Environmental and Molecular Toxicology at NC State University. He received a B.S. in Environmental Sciences in 1983 from Lenoir-Rhyne University in Hickory, NC, a M.S. degree in Biology with emphasis in aquatic sciences from the University of Wisconsin-La Crosse in 1988, and a Ph.D. with a double major in Fisheries Biology and Toxicology from Iowa State University in 1991. Greg’s experience prior to coming to NC State in 1997 includes six years (1991-1997) as a Research Fishery Biologist with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service at the National Fisheries Research Center in La Crosse, Wisconsin. His interests and expertise are in the effects of anthropogenic stresses on aquatic organisms, with emphasis on fish and native freshwater mussels, the bioavailability, fate and transport of pollutants in aquatic ecosystems, and public outreach and education. He is active in the Freshwater Mollusk Conservation Society, most recently as President (2009-2011), and is the current President of the North Carolina Chapter of the American Fisheries Society. His laboratory is currently conducting acute and chronic toxicity tests with native freshwater mussels and snails and two aquatic herbicides (fluridone and endothall) commonly used to treat Hydrilla infestations in surface waters.

Dr. Doug Dixon is a Technical Executive for power plant fish protection research in EPRI’s Environment Sector. He is the Program Manager of EPRI’s Clean Water Act §316 (a&b) Fish Protection Issues Research Program.  Dr. Dixon has more than 35 years of wide-range experience in environmental science and engineering research, including 20 years assessing the impacts of power plants on aquatic resources. Dr. Dixon’s expertise spans marine and freshwater fisheries biology, design and execution of field sampling studies, and statistical analysis of field data. He has extensive knowledge of fish protection technologies at cooling water intake structures and fish passage technologies for hydroelectric projects. Dr. Dixon earned a BA in Biology (1971), at State University of New York at Geneseo and received his PhD in Marine Fisheries Science (1996) at the Virginia Institute of Marine Science, College of William & Mary. Title – Management of Debris at Power Plant Cooling Water Intakes and Anticipating Hydrilla Problems in the Ohio River

Hydrilla control is a very real and growing issue in the Ohio River basin, with environmental and economic impacts alike. So please plan to attend or pass this information on to others who would benefit from the meeting or can bring additional expertise. 

Eric Boyda
Coordinator
Appalachian Ohio Weed Control Partnership
www.appalachianohioweeds.org
740-534-6578
6518 State Route 93
Pedro, OH 45659

Cleveland Metroparks Hydrilla Workshop

Hydrilla Workshop: Early Detection & Rapid Response in the Lake Erie Watershed
Tuesday, April 23, 2013   9:00am to 3:00pm

 North Chagrin Reservation
North Chagrin Nature Center
3037 SOM Center Road, Willoughby Hills, Ohio 44094
(follow signs to Nature Center) 440-473-3370
http://maps.clevelandmetroparks.com

 This workshop is intended to encourage regional surveys for hydrilla and to develop connections among diverse organizations with an interest in preventing the spread of aquatic nuisance species. Ample time will be given to introductions and side conversations to spark collaborations among water resource and plant professionals. Live specimens of hydrilla will be presented for identification.

 Agenda

9:00     Welcome and Introductions

9:15     Hydrilla verticillata ecology – Jennifer Hillmer, Cleveland Metroparks

10:00   Identification and vouchering of hydrilla and submersed aquatics – John Reinier, Cleveland Metroparks

10:45   Break

11:00   Detection of hydrilla – field survey methods, monitoring methods – Claire Weldon, Cleveland Metroparks

11:45   Lunch (on your own, brown bag lunch is suggested)

1:00     Invasive Plant Prevention and Control: EDDMaps and Citizen Engagement, Nate Drag, Great Lakes United, Buffalo, New York

1:45     Aquatic Interstate Surveillance, Gregory Sargis, The Nature Conservancy, Central & Western New York

2:00     Control and management of hydrilla

2:30     Wrap-up

To register (free) or for questions, contact

Jennifer Hillmer, Invasive Plant Coordinator
Division of Natural Resources
jah@clevelandmetroparks.com
440-213-2542 (cell)

Sponsors

Cleveland Metroparks
Crooked River CWMA
Great Lakes United
Ohio Invasive Plants Council

Hydrilla Workshop Agenda_Directions

Get up to $5,000 for your Citizen-based Monitoring Project in Wisconsin

Since 2004 the Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources and the Wisconsin Citizen-based Monitoring Network have sought to expand citizen and volunteer participation in natural resource monitoring by providing funding and assistance to high priority projects. Qualifying topics include monitoring of aquatic and terrestrial species, natural communities, and environmental components such as water, weather, and soil. $100,000 of Partnership Program funding is available for the 2014 state fiscal year (July 1, 2013 to June 30, 2014). Funding proposals are limited to $5,000.

Applications are due by April 26th.

Application Guidelines

Application

The Appalachian Ohio Weed Control Partnership (AOWCP) begins using GLEDN

AOWCP has begun using and promoting GLEDN for invasive species mapping in their region of Ohio. Regional programs like AOWCP are important contributors to invasive species control efforts. The data AOWCP will contribute will improve our understanding of where invasive species are and what invasive species are doing.

Here’s and introduction to AOWCP in their own words:

The Appalachian Ohio Weed Control Partnership (AOWCP) is cooperative weed management area (CWMA) that was formed on June 26th, 2012. The AOWCP is located in 16 counties of southeastern Ohio: Athens, Gallia, Hocking, Jackson, Lawrence, Meigs, Monroe, Morgan, Muskingum, Noble, Perry, Pike, Ross, Scioto, Vinton, and Washington counties. It consists of private landowners as well as local, state, federal, and private agencies and organizations working together to increase the awareness and control of invasive plants at a landscape level. By coordinating the efforts of these various land owners and managers, the AOWCP attempts to cross boundaries and deal with invasive plants at a broader scale.

The goals for the group are to: increase regional awareness of invasive plants, map invasive plant distributions, detect new invasives in early stages of invasion, strategically control invasive plants, obtain grants and funding sources, and to develop a strategic plan for establishing long-term direction and priorities for the group. These goals are accomplished by working with partners to promote land stewardship, conduct research, and exchange information about invasive plants. With an increasing network of partners, the AOWCP is able to pool resources, from a variety of sources, to combat invasive plant problems throughout the AOWCP boundaries.

If you are interested in learning more about AOWCP you can visit their website.