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STATE HAS LOST BATTLE OF PLANTS - INVADERS STAY.


Byline: Richard Cole Associated Press

In a new park along the Central California coast, volunteer Dave Sands hacks at a eucalyptus sapling with his machete. Then he chops away at a yellow-flowered French broom.

He points disgustedly at German ivy smothering smothering

death by asphyxiation. Occurs where poultry are carelessly herded into a corner where they cannot escape and where they are piled four or five birds deep; they will die of asphyxia very quickly. See also crowding.
 a seasonal stream bed, and at stands of pampas grass pampas grass, any species of the genus Cortaderia, tall South American plants of the family Gramineae (grass family) cultivated in warm climates for ornament. The common pampas grass (C.  overrunning a wide bend in the trail.

Finally he smiles, pointing up 30 feet on a hillside.

"Monkey plant. Now that's native," says Sands.

The monkey plant and occasional mulberry bush in El Granada Quarry Park near Half Moon Bay are rare native survivors in a sea of exotic plants imported from the Mediterranean, India, Australia and elsewhere.

Free from natural enemies, this army of plant invaders is robbing California of its biological heritage, squeezing out native species that cannot compete with the fast-growing foreigners.

Vanishing along with those plants are native animals such as deer, raccoon raccoon, nocturnal New World mammal of the genus Procyon. The common raccoon of North America, Procyon lotor, also called coon, is found from S Canada to South America, except in parts of the Rocky Mts. and in deserts. , fox, coyote coyote (kī`ōt, kīō`tē) or prairie wolf, small, swift wolf, Canis latrans, native to W North America. It is found in deserts, prairies, open woodlands, and brush country; it is also called brush wolf.  and many species of fish dependent on the state's natural ecosystem.

"This mixing of plants is a major biological upheaval, of greater consequence for us than the ozone hole, than global warming," says Jim Trumbly, a senior ecologist for the state Department of Parks.

Jacob Sigg, chairman of the invasive plants committee for the California Native Plant Society The California Native Plant Society (CNPS) is a California not-for-profit organization that seeks to increase understanding of California's native flora and to preserve that flora. The CNPS was formed in 1965 in the East Bay. , says at least 600 foreign plants have reached California by accident or design.

The damage is extensive.

Virtually no native grasslands remain in California, Trumbly says. Foreign grasses, eucalyptus trees, French broom and other invaders have seized the state's open spaces.

In parched parch  
v. parched, parch·ing, parch·es

v.tr.
1. To make extremely dry, especially by exposure to heat: The midsummer sun parched the earth.
 Southern California, Mike Kelly, state secretary of the California Exotic Pest Plant Council says, the encroaching plant pests seem intent on sucking up what little water remains.

A bamboo-like plant called giant reed has taken over river banks and stream beds, sending down deep tap roots to siphon off the water while choking waterways to crowd out native willow, cottonwood and sycamore trees.

"It's a monoculture mon·o·cul·ture  
n.
1. The cultivation of a single crop on a farm or in a region or country.

2. A single, homogeneous culture without diversity or dissension.
 of this one plant marching down the streams," Kelly says.

Along the Santa Ana River The Santa Ana River begins in San Bernardino County, California in the San Bernardino National Forest. Its highest source lakes are Dollar Lake (9220') and Dry Lake (9065'), both on the northern flank of San Gorgonio Mountain (11,502') in the San Gorgonio Wilderness.  in Riverside County, 30 public and private agencies joined last year to cut and kill enough giant reed to dry up the water supply for 100,000 people.

In the desert areas, tamarisk tamarisk (tăm`ərĭsk), shrub or small tree of the genus Tamarix, native chiefly to the Mediterranean area and to central Asia. The plants are often heathlike and thrive in arid and coastal regions.  swallows up water holes, its deep roots drying up pools vital to the survival of plants and animals Plants and Animals are a Canadian indie-rock band from Montreal, comprised of guitarist-vocalists Warren Spicer and Nic Basque, and drummer-vocalist Matthew Woodley.[1] They are signed to Secret City Records.  alike.

Los Angeles is battling ficus trees imported from India for their ornamental value and fast growth, but whose octopus-like roots now break pipes, sidewalks and streets.

On Angel Island in San Francisco Bay San Francisco Bay, 50 mi (80 km) long and from 3 to 13 mi (4.8–21 km) wide, W Calif.; entered through the Golden Gate, a strait between two peninsulas. , state rangers supervise the removal of 10,000 eucalyptus trees that have overgrown overgrown

said of a part that has not been kept trimmed.


overgrown hoof
overgrown hooves put unusual stresses on bones and tendons and allow for distortion of the wall and sole.
 parts of the scenic refuge. That logging operation ran into opposition from citizens in the late 1980s, until the Oakland Hills fire muted public enthusiasm for the trees.

"The aesthetics of this island were dramatically changed by eucalyptus. It's not a natural look," says state ecologist Dave Boyd. "And they are terribly dangerous - this stuff is highly flammable."

California is so overrun - and the solutions so expensive - that the Parks Department makes no systemwide effort to eliminate the exotics.

The best it can do for now, says Trumbly, is pick a few spots to protect the

dwindling dwin·dle  
v. dwin·dled, dwin·dling, dwin·dles

v.intr.
To become gradually less until little remains.

v.tr.
To cause to dwindle. See Synonyms at decrease.
 remains of California's original ecosystem.

"Problems with exotic species have clearly overrun our ability to deal with them," agrees Jay Watson, western regional director of the Wilderness Society.

There are some efforts to at least check, if not reverse, the invasion.

Boyd is experimenting with controlled burns on Mount Tamalpais north of San Francisco to wipe out the French broom that plagues its slopes. The results are promising, but controlled burns are risky near developed areas.

The city of San Diego aggressively roots out exotics in its park system.

In the Golden Gate National Recreation Area Golden Gate National Recreation Area, Calif.: see National Parks and Monuments (table).  around San Francisco, weekend volunteers laboriously pull up German ivy, ice plant and other non-native species.

At least one private company has found a way to make money and create jobs while fighting eucalyptus. Planned Sierra Resources has a contract to remove the Angel Island trees, and coordinates with organizations such as California ReLeaf to plant native species in their place.

Fred Gibson, Planned Sierra's marketing manager, says that in most cases the company removes the trees at no charge - a boon to strapped public agencies and homeowners - making its profits by selling the eucalyptus to Japanese paper makers.

"We employ people, we recycle the fiber, it provides export income, and it mitigates a lot of hazards," Gibson says. "It's a win-win situation."

But while volunteers, burning and logging can help, most ecologists believe the only long-term solution is nature itself.

Eventually, they say, the quirks of California's climate will catch up with unprepared exotic plants, or natural enemies will follow them from their homeland.

TARGETED PLANTS

A list of some of the most widespread and damaging species of foreign plants found in California, as compiled by the California Exotic Pest Plant Council, listing the plant, then its habitat, then the region where it is found:

1. Giant reed; stream and river corridors; all coastal areas.

2. Pampas grass; dunes, scrub, pine forests; North and Central coasts.

3. Broom (French, Scotch, Portuguese); scrub and oak woodlands; Northern California, Sierra Nevada, Central Valley, south coast.

4. Tasmanian blue gum eucalyptus; streams, grasslands, dunes, moist slopes; Northern California, Central Valley, south coast.

5. Freeway ice plant; coastal areas, dunes; Northern California, central and southern coasts.

6. German ivy; stream and river corridors; coastal areas.

7. Tamarisk or salt cedar; desert washes, stream beds; deserts, coast and coastal mountains, Central Valley.

8. Yellow star thistle yellow star thistle

centaureasolstitialis.
; grasslands; Northern California.

9. European beach grass; coastal dunes; all coastal areas.

10. Fountain grass; grasslands, desert canyons, roadsides; northern and central coasts, Central Valley.

11. Gorse gorse: see furze.
gorse

Any of several related plants of the genera Ulex and Genista. Common gorse (U. europaeus) is a spiny, yellow-flowered leguminous shrub native to Europe and naturalized in the Middle Atlantic states and on Vancouver Island.
; shrub lands; Northern California.

CAPTION(S):

PHOTO[ordinal indicator, masculine]CHART

Photo Skye Schuchman works with other volunteers to pull out clumps of ice plant near the shoreline at San Francisco's Fort Funston. Associated Press Box TARGETED PLANTS (see text)
COPYRIGHT 1996 Daily News
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 1996, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Publication:Daily News (Los Angeles, CA)
Date:Mar 24, 1996
Words:992
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