Two organizations that work to protect Adirondack lands and waters from environmental and economic harm caused by invasive species —The Nature Conservancy’s Adirondack Park Invasive Plant Program (APIPP) and the Lake Champlain Basin Program (LCBP) — have released a pair of free complementary guides on invasive species in the Adirondacks.
Together, APIPP’s Field Guide to Terrestrial Invasive Species of the Adirondacks and LCBP’s Lake Champlain Basin Aquatic Invasive Species Guide provide information on more than 70 invasive plants and animals that have been identified in the Adirondack region.
Both booklets can help people identify these plants and animals, and include the defining characteristics of each species, common look-alike species, habitat descriptions and photos.
LCBP’s new guide covers aquatic invasive species and includes anatomical diagrams and known distribution within and near the Lake Champlain watershed.
APIPP’s new guide focuses on terrestrial invasive species, and includes information on managing terrestrial invasive species and a primer on plant identification. It also includes information about how to use the iMapInvasives app to enter data into New York state’s invasive species database.
Both guides were developed to help outdoor recreationists, property owners and others recognize potentially harmful non-native species in the region’s lands and waterbodies in order to help reduce the spread of these species.
For a species to be considered invasive, it must be non-native to the ecosystem under consideration and the species’ introduction must cause, or be likely to cause, harm to the economy, environment or human health.
More than 70 terrestrial invasive species have been documented in the Adirondack region, and species like small carpetgrass, Japanese hops and oak wilt are found just outside of the region’s borders.
Lake Champlain is home to 51 known aquatic non-native or invasive species. The last invasive species detected in Lake Champlain was the fishhook waterflea in 2018, but several species, including round goby, quagga mussel and hydrilla, pose an imminent threat. The Great Lakes, Hudson River, and St. Lawrence River, which are all connected to the lake, harbor dozens more potential invaders.
To download or order a copy of the field guides or other free outreach materials, visit the Adirondack Park Invasive Plant Program website or the Lake Champlain Basin Program website.
Photo provided.
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