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Kaspersen, Janice

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Monday, April 06, 2009 8:00 PM

Of Nutria and Men

By: Kaspersen, Janice Comments

It’s the story of the nutria all over again. It’s happening in Colorado this time, not Louisiana, but the arc is very similar.

The nutria story involves a couple of invasive species—one plant, one animal—that met up in the southern United States. In 1884, the water hyacinth was first brought to the US from Japan and exhibited at the Cotton States Exposition in New Orleans. It’s a lovely plant, and fair-goers took home souvenirs and planted them; soon, the water hyacinth took so well to its new home that it was clogging waterways throughout the Southeast and interfering with navigation. Huge amounts of money were spent in trying to get rid of it.

Nutria are large, semi-aquatic rodents—picture a 12-pound rat—imported to the US from South America in the early 1900s for their fur. In the 1940s, someone realized that nutria did a terrific job of controlling water hyacinth and other aquatic weeds, and large numbers of the rodents were released throughout Louisiana, where they thrived. By the 1950s, people realized that beyond devouring just the weeds, the nutria were also wreaking havoc with rice and sugarcane fields, damaging marshes, and actually weakening earthen levees by stripping and eating most of the vegetation on them. Since then, the nutria have had a checkered fate, both killed as pests and occasionally (when their numbers dropped so much that the fur industry protested) placed on the protected species list.

The more recent version of the story features the tamarisk, or salt cedar—a tall shrub native to central Asia—and the Diorhabda elongata, a smallish beetle from Kazakhstan, also known as the salt cedar beetle. The tamarisk was brought to the US in the 1800s and widely used for erosion control and windbreaks. It was also planted for shade. It spread and crowded out native plants such as cottonwood and willow and formed dense stands that became wildfire risks, and efforts to control the plant have been ongoing.

Three years ago, the US Department of Agriculture began releasing the beetle, which eats the leaves of the tamarisk, along stretches of Colorado streams in an attempt to control the invasive plant without using herbicides. It worked very well—too well, according to some. Scientists at the University of Utah, using satellite-mounted infrared sensors, are documenting defoliated areas along the Colorado River, far outside the areas where the beetles were initially released. They say the salt cedar beetle is responsible for killing off the shade-providing tamarisk in areas where the last few breeding pairs of an endangered bird, the southwestern willow flycatcher, are nesting, and that if something isn’t done soon the birds will die out in the region.

The Center for Biological Diversity and a chapter of the Audubon Society are now suing the federal Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service over the beetle-introduction program. They claim federal officials did nothing to ensure the tamarisk would be replaced by native shade-providing plants; there is actually a danger of similarly water-guzzling non-natives moving in to take its place.

Biological controls like the beetle have been used successfully in many cases and have provided an alternative to, or at least a way to cut down on, herbicide use. The Galerucella beetle has been used in the US for years to control the wetland invasive purple loosestrife, for example.  It’s often hard to predict the long-term consequences of introducing a new species, but this is a story we’ve heard often enough that we should be more aware, by now, of the possible surprise endings. 

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