From: Chang, David
Sent: Wednesday, April 05, 2006 12:33 PM
To: Chang, David
Subject: [SBCWMA News] April 2006

Follow Up Flag: Follow up
Flag Status: Green

 

Hello SBCWMA Newsletter Subscribers:

 

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News

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SBCWMA Wins Grant Award to Control Artichoke Thistle

            The Santa Barbara County Weed Management Area has been awarded $8,590 from the CDFA/USFS Forest Rangeland Enhancement Project.  An application was submitted to the US Forest Service via the California Department of Food and Agriculture for a 2 year project to control artichoke thistle (Cynara cardunculus) on the Gaviota Coast on a property that is the western neighbor of the Arroyo Hondo Preserve.  

 

Cal-HIP Issues Spring Newsletter

The California Partnership for the Prevention of Invasive Plant Introductions through Horticulture, (Cal-PPIPIH), has a new name – California Horticultural Invasives Prevention (Cal-HIP).  Their steering committee selected the shorter, more direct name and acronym to use in outreach and education activities.  This is a consortium, led by Sustainable Conservation, of nursery, public agencies, and non-governmental organizations who are working to voluntarily reduce the number of invasive ornamentals available in the trade.  Join them in celebrating their new name by visiting their online newsletter: http://www.suscon.org/invasives/newsletter/Spring2006/Spring2006.asp

 

Border War?

            Additional controversy about invasive weeds was generated by a New York Times Op-ed piece written by George Ball, president of W. Atlee Burpee & Company and a former president of the American Horticultural Society.  Click here to reach the article.

            If you are unable to reach the New York Times article try this link at Burpee.com: http://www.burpee.com/jump.jsp?itemID=815&itemType=CONTENT_ARTICLE

Rebuttals were posted on various sites and blogs on the internet – Mother Jones; Windstar; RichardSilversteinBlog.  I do not know if the New York Times published any additional comments generated by Mr. Ball’s editorial. 

            I learned about this editorial and the rebuttals from the Alien Plants Working Group listserv: http://www.nps.gov/plants/alien/maillist.htm

 

Hazardous Waste Collection Day in Santa Ynez Valley

            The County of Santa Barbara Public Works Department, in partnership with the City of Solvang, will be hosting the next bi-annual Santa Ynez Valley Household Hazardous Waste and Electronics Collection Event on Sunday, April 9th from 9:00 A.M. to 3:00 P.M. (8:00 A.M. to 9:00 A.M. for small businesses by appointment) at the Santa Ynez Valley Recycling and Transfer Station, 4004 Foxen Canyon Road in Los Olivos.  Disposal is free for Valley residents; businesses are charged disposal fees. Quantities Accepted: 15 gallons or 125 pounds of waste per resident per trip (up to three trips).  Materials Accepted: Household hazardous wastes (such as paint, batteries, automotive fluids, and pesticides) and consumer electronics (such as televisions, computer equipment, radios, telephones, and microwaves).  Questions: Call (805) 882-3615 or visit http://www.lessismore.org  

 

Sudden Oak Death Task Force Meeting Summary

While sudden oak death is not an invasive weed, I thought this would be an item of interest to those in the environmental community.  Heather Scheck, the Agricultural Commissioner's Plant Pathologist, provided this summary of the spring 2006 meeting of the California Oak Mortality Task Force in Carmel. The meeting provided Management and Research Updates from California, Oregon, Washington and the European Union. 

The Federal Emergency Regulations for SOD are due to “sunset” in 2007 so USDA is analyzing procedures and protocols for permanent rules. The American Nursery and Landscape Association is developing Best Management Practices for its members.  Plant destruction is still the only option for confirmed nurseries, there is no fungicide treatment nor is there likely to be one in the future.  There are new trace-forward protocols for retail nurseries that are far more extensive than in the past. 

Various regulatory labs report an overall decline in positive nurseries for the 2005/2006 season, with the exception of 2 finds at nurseries in Florida, where none were previously reported. This is mainly attributed to the closing of a Los Angeles County nursery that had shipped infected camellias to 26 states in past years.  There is good trace back evidence now that the nursery received infected camellias from a nursery in Santa Cruz County, and Phytophthora ramorum was able to spread at an exponential rate in their blocks. 

The California Department of Food and Agriculture has processed 25,000 regulatory samples this season, and approximately 1% have been positive, so a total of 55 nurseries were positive statewide, approximately the same number as last year. Several nurseries are repeat positives – they went through the Confirmed Nursery Protocol last year and were released, only to test positive again this year. The only positive nursery in Southern California is in Los Angeles County. We have not received any trace forwards to our branch of this nursery. Washington reported its first find of SOD outside of a nursery. 

It is extremely depressing to see the damage that SOD has done in the Big Sur region. They estimate that over 100,000 oaks and tanoaks have been killed to date and the projection is that 400-600,000 will die before the epidemic burns out.  SOD is also moving north in Humboldt County and eradication efforts in Curry County, Oregon have not been successful despite hundreds of acres having been cut and burned since 2003.

The United Kingdom also reports problems with P. ramorum in their nurseries, landscapes, historical gardens and wildlands. A survey of the EU shows SOD to be widespread and they have an additional new Phytophthora, P. kernoviae, which has a similar host range to P. ramorum.  In the UK, the greatest mortality from P. ramorum has been to beech trees, not their native oaks or conifers.   In California and Oregon, the greatest losses have been on tanoaks.

There are plans for more aerial and ground surveys in Santa Barbara County from May – July.  The good news is that SOD still appears to be confined to the coastal mixed evergreen forests – those dominated by redwoods, firs, oaks, tanoaks and bay laurels. It has not been found in the oak savannah which is our dominant landscape.  The host list continues to expand; there are now 100 confirmed hosts with more native and non-native plants added every year.  See the complete list of hosts at http://www.aphis.usda.gov/ppq/ispm/pramorum/pdf_files/usdaprlist.pdf.

(Trace-back and trace-forward are methods to follow plant purchases and sales.)

 

New Video/DVD on English Ivy as an Invasive Weed

Ecovisions has completed their video/DVD presentation on English ivy.  The video, English Ivy; Managing an Invasive Alien Species, was completed early this year. Copies are available for $28 -- delivered. Send check or money order to: Ecovisions Inc; 410 Berry Circle; Talent OR, 97540.  For more information visit:  www.xenob.com

 

California Noxious and Invasive Weed Plan

            The California Noxious and Invasive Weed Action Plan was released in September 2005.  If you're interested in seeing which agencies and other organizations are set to accomplish each part of the plan, they are listed after each "Selected Action" throughout the plan.  To view the PDF file, please click here to go to the CDFA website.  If you would like paper copies to distribute, please click here to send your request with your mailing address to Katie Filippini at CDFA.

            The Weed Plan has identified selected actions that will immediately be addressed by agencies, groups and individuals to begin doing more with the resources at hand. Furthermore, the plan has identified comprehensive needs that if addressed, will enable some of the most serious impacts from noxious and invasive weeds to be minimized and prevented.  Progress in implementing the plan will be evaluated on a yearly basis to ensure its recommendations are fulfilled. A continuation of the steering committee will monitor, and facilitate, implementation of the plan.

 

 

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Educational Events

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Cal-IPC Wildland Field Courses

            The California Invasive Plant Council is sponsoring three field courses in Northern California on wildland invasive weed control.  Click here for more information and to register.  Following are course times and descriptions:

            1. Management Strategies and Techniques. April 24, 2006; 8:30AM-5:00PM; Bouverie Preserve; Glen Ellen (Sonoma County); $125

The one-day course is back by popular demand! This course focuses on Integrated Pest Management control methods taught by invasive weed experts with extensive on-the-ground experience. The program includes a comprehensive overview of field methods and hands-on demonstrations of the latest technologies. Participants can expect to emerge with an understanding of all major management approaches - mechanical, cultural, chemical, biological - and incorporating them into an integrated control program. The one-day field course is designed for agency staff, land managers, and stewardship volunteers.

            2. Management Strategies and Techniques – Expanded.  May 24-25, 2006; 9:00am-5:00pm; Cache Creek Conservancy; Winters (Yolo County) $250/270

Cal-IPC has expanded the popular one-day field course, packed with practical information and intensive instruction by experts in the invasive plant control field. In addition to discussion of the major management techniques (mechanical, cultural, chemical, biological), this course will delve into herbicide formulations and modes of action; invasive plant biology; monitoring and field sampling; and planning a comprehensive, strategic management program. During the course, participants and instructors will form workgroups as part of an exercise to plan control strategies for real-world invasive plant management situations.

            3. Tools for Early Detection.  October 4, 2006; Time TBA; Bouverie Preserve (Sonoma County); $125/145

Join invasive plant experts to discuss invasive plant biology, identification, and vouchering techniques - and stay for the always fabulous Cal-IPC Symposium in Sonoma County. This "hands-on" course includes practical ideas for planning an early detection program and utilizing GPS in data collection. Details will be posted at www.cal-ipc.org when the agenda is finalized.

 

Society for Conservation Biology Meeting and Conference

The 20th annual meeting of the Society for Conservation Biology, Conservation Without Borders, will be held 24-28 June 2006 in San Jose, California.  Please join as many as 2000 participants from more than 50 countries in advancing the science and practice of conserving the Earth's biological diversity.

Among the themes highlighted throughout the meeting will be freshwater and marine conservation, local-level and regional-level conservation, 21st century conservation, and transboundary conservation.  The meeting will include plenary presentations, contributed paper and poster sessions, and diverse social and networking events.  Short courses and field trips also will be offered.

The meeting will be held concurrently with the Ninth Annual International Conference of the Society for Conservation GIS. Registered participants in the SCB meeting also will be welcome at all events sponsored by SCGIS.

For complete information on the meeting or to register, please visit http://www.ConservationBiology.org/2006.  Regular registration rates are available until 14 May, after which late registration rates will apply until 9 June.  Questions may be directed to 2006@conbio.org

 

 

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Grant Opportunity

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Government Mobility: Coastal Communities Edition Grant

ESRI and Trimble Announce Call for Demonstration Projects for Government Mobility: Coastal Communities Edition.  Applications will be accepted between March 24 and June 2, 2006.

The ESRI and Trimble software, hardware, and training grants totaling $96,000 will be awarded to 10 state or local governments within the United States. The program is designed to support all disciplines engaged in activities that serve to sustain coastal communities. Examples of eligible projects could draw from, but are not limited to, areas such as facility inspection, public facilities, agriculture, community development, redevelopment, public works, engineering, law enforcement, emergency management, cadastral and survey management, homeland security, conservation, environmental management, watershed management, parks and recreation, economic development, air quality, health and human services, and transportation.

The goal of this program is to foster innovative approaches to solving government problems through the combined use of geographic information system technology and GPS technology. Projects must demonstrate increased efficiencies in collecting data for decision support or increased productivity in delivering government services.

Eligibility: The program is open to all forms of state and local governments serving coastal communities residing in the United States as well as all departments within a government organization. For the purposes of this grant, a coastal community will be defined as a unit of government residing within a county that meets the following criteria:

·         At least 15 percent of its total land area is located within the nation's coastal watershed or

·         A portion of the entire county accounts for at least 15 percent of a coastal cataloging unit (an individual drainage basin)

To view a list of the 656 counties meeting the designation of a coastal county/community, please visit the National Association of Counties Web site.

Grant Application Guidelines

 

 

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Acknowledgement

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            The news on this newsletter may be compiled from various sources including emails I receive from various people I know, who are involved in the invasive weed field, and from listservs.  I modify the emails, but they are often inserted here nearly verbatim.  I thank those people for this information and for their devotion to protecting and conserving habitat.  

 

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Sincerely,

David Chang

Agricultural Commissioner's Office

County of Santa Barbara

(805) 681-5600

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