LandsofAmerica.com - Land Resources / News / Giant salvinia threat to fishing holes
#1 in Land for Sale Online
Land ID Search
International Paper Timberland for Sale
Click Below to Find a Farm or Ranch for Sale
America
Alabama
Alaska
Arizona
Arkansas
California
Colorado
Connecticut
Delaware
Florida
Georgia
Hawaii
Idaho
Illinois
Indiana
Iowa
Kansas
Kentucky
Louisiana
Maine
Maryland
Massachusetts
Michigan
Minnesota
Mississippi
Missouri
Montana
Nebraska
Nevada
New Hampshire
New Jersey
New Mexico
New York
North Carolina
North Dakota
Ohio
Oklahoma
Oregon
Pennsylvania
Rhode Island
South Carolina
South Dakota
Tennessee
Texas
Utah
Vermont
Virginia
Washington
West Virginia
Wisconsin
Wyoming

Land for Sale
sort by
Most Popular
Most Expensive
Most Acreage

Land Resources / News / Giant salvinia threat to fishing holes
Giant salvinia threat to fishing holes (complete article from source)
Source: The Hicksburg Post, by Tom Hartwell
September 04, 2007
Theresa Gunter, in knee boots, can almost walk on the thick weeds that blanket one of her former fishing holes across the Mississippi River from Vicksburg. Giant salvinia, the fast-growing aquatic fern is having a very good year — so much so that the water weed has grown so thick that some ponds resemble a field.

“This pit had some humongous white perch. Beautiful perch,” said Gunter, squishing through the marshy tarp of plants. The “pit” is a borrow pit, one of hundreds created when soil was “borrowed” to create the river levees. They’ve been excellent fisheries for decades, but are severely threatened.

Giant salvinia, which is native to Brazil, has crept northward in Louisiana as far as Madison Parish and the pits where Gunter and her family used to fish. It is tenacious and fast-growing, experts say, and left unchecked can take over a body of water the way kudzu — another invasive plant species — has overtaken forests and undergrowth in the South.

Giant Salvinia covers most of the bar pits on land the Gunter family leases as pasture for cattle.

“The cows love it,” she said. “You can see where they wander out to eat it.”

Sometimes, however, the weed is so thick the grazing animals get tangled and must be extracted using a tractor. “You put a chain around their bellies and just pull them out,” Gunter said. Giant salvinia has spread across much of Louisiana in recent years and is known to grow in Mississippi ponds, too. Once introduced, the plant rapidly swallows the surface of a pond or a lake, crowding out native plants, fish and animals.

State wildlife agencies have declared war against the weed, whose tenacity and growth rate liken it to a green creature from a horror movie.

The fern leeches nutrients from ponds, chokes off sunlight from fish and turns open water into marshland, ruining it for boaters and swimmers, too.

“A boat just doesn’t stand a chance in it because it’s so thick,” Gunter said.

Sad at the loss of her favorite fishing spots, Gunter was alarmed the speed at which the plants spread. She is concerned at what she says is lack of awareness about the plants, which can take over a body of water in a matter of weeks. Actually, there is a widespread awareness of Giant salvinia among state and federal agencies — but there’s not a lot that can be done about it.

“The plant has an amazing ability to grow under ideal conditions,” said Michael Pursley, a biologist with the Mississippi Department of Marine Resources. “It can double the size of the area it occupies in four or five days.”

Pursley patrols waterways in Mississippi’s three coastal counties, and keeps an eye out for giant salvinia, hydrilla, water hyacinth and other invasive plant that threaten aquatic ecosystems.

Giant salvinia, which threatened several lakes on Mississippi’s coast before the storm surge from Hurricane Katrina poisoned most of it with salt water, threatens to return, he said.

“Fisherman can spread it pretty easily with their boats and their boat trailers,” he said. Posters warning people to clean plants from boats and propellers have been posted at public launches, he said. A cleanup effort is under way on the Pascagoula River, he said.

“It’s a very aggressive plant and it has the potential to rapidly cover the entire surface of the water,” said Dennis Reicke, a biologist at the Mississippi Department of Wildlife and Parks. He said information on the plant has been distributed to scientists, but not to private boaters.

Private lakes in Mississippi have not been surveyed for giant salvinia, Pursley said.

“As long as its not impacting waterways, it’s really the responsibility of the landowner,” Pursley said.



Giant salvinia was probably was introduced to North America via the exotic plant trade, shipped here from the Amazon Basin.

“You can actually purchase this plant on the Internet,” said Linda Nelson, a researcher at the U.S. Army’s Waterways Experiment Station in Vicksburg. “People don’t realize when they put it in their water garden - they think it’s just an innocent little plant.”

Nelson, who is part of a team that studies invasive marine plant species, researched ways the plant can be killed using herbicides in 2006.

Though she still has giant salvinia plants at the experiment station, research has stalled. “We didn’t get funded this year,” she said.

Attacks on the plant must be complete because it will return if not completely removed. Chemicals and machines have been used to remove giant salvinia, and scientists have even tried introducing other nonnative species to eat the fern.

In 2003, The Hawaii Department of Land and Natural Resources, using herbicides and industrial equipment, cleared 285 acres of the plant from the state’s largest freshwater body, Lake Wilson. Giant Salvinia had overtaken 95 percent of the lake’s surface area.

“They used front-end loaders and tried to pull it out of the lake,” Nelson said. Boats would round up the weeds and haul them to dredging machines on shore. “It was very costly.”

In 2005, the Mississippi Department of Wildlife, Fisheries & Parks introduced weevils to lakes affected by giant salvinia, in the hopes that they would eat the plants. Several days after the bugs were released, Katrina hit, and salinity killed off most of the plants, said Pursley.

Nelson said the plant has the potential to wreak havoc if left unchecked.

“If there are any remaining plants they’re going to come back again and take over like they did in Louisiana.”

“It’s spreading and its taken over,” Gunter said. “I know people that have spread different chemicals on it; it can’t be killed.”

Click here for complete article from The Hicksburg Post

Signup | Contact Us

View All Land, Farm, Ranch, and Waterfront Properties for Sale

Land for Sale | Alabama Land | Alaska Land | Arizona Land | Arkansas Land | California Land | Colorado Land | Florida Land | Georgia Land | Idaho Land | Illinois Land | Indiana Land | Iowa Land | Kansas Land | Kentucky Land | Louisiana Land | Massachusetts Land | Mississippi Land | Missouri Land | Montana Land | Nebraska Land | Nevada Land | New Mexico Land | New York Land | North Carolina Land | Ohio Land | Oklahoma Land | Oregon Land | South Carolina Land | Tennessee Land | Texas Land | Utah Land | Virginia Land | Washington Land | West Virginia Land | Wisconsin Land | Wyoming Land

Rural Homes for Sale | Alabama Homes | Alaska Homes | Arizona Homes | Arkansas Homes | California Homes | Colorado Homes | Florida Homes | Georgia Homes | Idaho Homes | Illinois Homes | Indiana Homes | Iowa Homes | Kansas Homes | Kentucky Homes | Louisiana Homes | Massachusetts Homes | Mississippi Homes | Missouri Homes | Montana Homes | Nebraska Homes | Nevada Homes | New Mexico Homes | New York Homes | North Carolina Homes | Ohio Homes | Oklahoma Homes | Oregon Homes | South Carolina Homes | Tennessee Homes | Texas Homes | Utah Homes | Virginia Homes | Washington Homes | West Virginia Homes | Wisconsin Homes | Wyoming Homes

Lake Houses for Sale | Alabama Lake Houses | Alaska Lake Houses | Arizona Lake Houses | Arkansas Lake Houses | California Lake Houses | Colorado Lake Houses | Florida Lake Houses | Georgia Lake Houses | Idaho Lake Houses | Illinois Lake Houses | Indiana Lake Houses | Iowa Lake Houses | Kansas Lake Houses | Kentucky Lake Houses | Louisiana Lake Houses | Massachusetts Lake Houses | Mississippi Lake Houses | Missouri Lake Houses | Montana Lake Houses | Nebraska Lake Houses | Nevada Lake Houses | New Mexico Lake Houses | New York Lake Houses | North Carolina Lake Houses | Ohio Lake Houses | Oklahoma Lake Houses | Oregon Lake Houses | South Carolina Lake Houses | Tennessee Lake Houses | Texas Lake Houses | Utah Lake Houses | Virginia Lake Houses | Washington Lake Houses | West Virginia Lake Houses | Wisconsin Lake Houses | Wyoming Lake Houses

Powered by LandsofAmerica.com

COPYRIGHT © 2003-Current, All Rights Reserved
Terms of Use