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From: Chang, David
Sent: Thursday, October 04, 2007 11:35 AM
Subject: [SBCWMA News] October 2007

SBCWMA Newsletter                                                                                                      October 2007

 

            My apologies for the long absence between newsletters.  The last one I sent out was in June.  – dc

 

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News

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Cal-IPC Creates Endowment Fund 10/2/07

            The California Invasive Plant Council officially completed the paperwork, on October 2, 2007, to open the "Cal-IPC Wildland Stewardship Fund" at the Marin Community Foundation.  The endowment fund was opened with $10,000 in contributions from Jake Sigg and Greg Omori.  The Cal-IPC board and staff thanks Jake and Greg and congratulates them on helping Cal-IPC reach this milestone!  It's a big step forward for the sustainability of the organization.
            Cal-IPC will be looking to grow the endowment. In November and December, a consultant will help Cal-IPC develop a fundraising plan so that board and staff can be most effective in generating contributions to support our work.

            Cal-IPC is a non-profit organization that depends on donations for its work.  Individuals and organizations may make a special gift to the Cal-IPC Wildland Stewardship Fund.  More details will come later, but in the meantime, you can contact Cal-IPC at (510) 843-3902 or visit www.cal-ipc.org for more information.

            As a member of the board, it is my responsibility to seek donations for Cal-IPC.  Often, it is the friends and family of a board member that are the first to get solicited for donations.  As a friend or member of the SBCWMA, please consider making a donation, large or small, to Cal-IPC. You can even make a purchase of Cal-IPC products and get a return on your donation.  Thank you. - dc

 

Wasp Found Feeding on Arundo 9/11/07

            Scientists have discovered a beneficial wasp in southern California that attacks a highly invasive weed, saving the federal government time and money that would have been spent to import the insect from Europe.  Two European beneficial insects that the USDA is working with are already here and could eventually provide natural control of the weed throughout the Southwest.  "We've confirmed that Tetramesa romana is genetically the same as wasps back in its native Mediterranean region, so the USDA won't have to import it to control giant reed," Dudley says.  Extensive surveys by postdoctoral researcher Adam Lambert also found that another candidate for importation, a "shootfly" of the genus Cryptonevra, is also here.

            …Excerpted from a September 11, 2007 news release by Stephanie Klunk from UC ANR News.  The full news release is at http://news.ucanr.org/newsstorymain.cfm?story=1020

 

Ninth Annual NIWAW 9/7/07

            The 9th Annual National Invasive Weeds Awareness Week (NIWAW 9) will be held in Washington, D.C. the week of February 24 to February 29, 2008 to bring people and groups from across the country together to focus national attention on the severe impacts caused by invasive weeds. Individuals and organizations interested in this issue are invited to participate in this event and help build on the success of NIWAW activities in previous years. NIWAW 9 events are designed to focus on the important roles the Federal government must play to help the U.S. deal with invasive weed problems. The schedule is designed to provide ample time for attendees to meet with their Congressional delegations, individual federal agencies and each other.

            For more information visit: http://www.nawma.org/niwaw/NIWAW%20IX/niwaw_index.htm  Reserve hotel blocked rooms by January 24, 2008, and register for NIWAW by February 1, 2008.

 

English as a Second Language Class Volunteers on Santa Cruz Island 7/9/07

            A group of ESL/Civics students assisted the Santa Cruz Island Native Plant Restoration Project with the control of Eucalyptus on Santa Cruz Island.  A news story can be seen at http://www.venturacountystar.com/news/2007/jul/09/immigrants-study-the-environment/

 

El Segundo Blue Butterfly Population Increases 7/8/07

            The endangered El Segundo Blue butterfly has reappeared at two L.A. area beaches where it has not been seen in decades.  The return is attributed to the removal of invasive iceplant and the replanting of native vegetation, including the butterfly’s food plant, buckwheat.  A copy of the story can be seen at: http://www.topix.net/content/trb/2007/07/rare-butterfly-makes-comeback-on-l-a-area-beaches

 

Aquatic Plants Don’t Plant a Pest Brochure Now Available 7/5/07

            A new "Don't Plant a Pest!" brochure is available from the California Invasive Plant Council. The new statewide Aquatic Plants brochure is aimed at the growing interest in water gardening. It describes alternatives to pond margin and bog plants, floating and rooting emergent species, and submerged plants. Thanks to funding from CDFA, Cal-IPC is distributing this brochure at NO CHARGE. We would especially like to distribute the Aquatic Plants brochure to agencies and other organizations that manage waterways in California. Please contact Elizabeth Brusati at edbrusati@cal-ipc.org for a sample brochure or to order larger quantities. A pdf of the brochure is posted at: www.cal-ipc.org/landscaping/dpp/brochures.php.

 

City of Encinitas Considers Invasive Plant Ban 7/5/07

            Citing that there are no prohibitions to planting invasive ornamentals, such as pampas grass, City Councilwoman Maggie Houlihan was able to convince Councilwoman Teresa Barth, Mayor Jim Bond and Deputy Mayor Jerome Stocks to vote in June to revisit recommendations made by the 2002 Blue Ribbon Environmental Committee, a citizens panel the council formed to overhaul Encinitas' policies concerning the environment. The 2002 Blue Ribbon Committee suggested, among other things, banning non-native plants on city property and requiring new residential and commercial developments to avoid using them. It also suggested eradicating pampas grass and arundo from city properties.  Besides pampas grass and arundo, the Blue Ribbon committee also listed acacia, giant reed, ice plant, wild fennel, perennial pepperweed, myoporum, castor bean, Brazilian and Peruvian pepper tree, and tamarisk/salt cedar as commonly found invasive plants in Encinitas. In June, the council majority also voted to form a citizens committee to study what to do with invasive plants.  Objecting to the formation of a bureaucracy and preferring an educational approach, Councilman Dan Dalager cast the only dissenting vote in this latest anti-invasive plant effort.

            …Adapted from a July 5th, 2007 news article by Angela Lau from the San Diego Union Tribune.  A copy of the complete article is available at http://www.calcoast.org/news/localgovernment0000024.html

 

 

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Grant Opportunities

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2007 West Coast Estuaries Initiative for the California Coast 9/29/07

            U.S. EPA Region 9 is soliciting proposals for projects that conserve, restore and protect the water quality, habitat and environment of California coastal waters, estuaries, bays and near shore waters through comprehensive approaches to water quality management. The emphasis is on supporting implementation activities based on existing plans, such as Comprehensive Conservation Management Plans (Clean Water Act Section 320), State programs such as the Integrated Regional Water Management Plans, and local watershed plans.

            States, local governments, public and private nonprofit institutions/organizations, federally recognized Indian tribal governments, U.S. territories or possessions, and interstate agencies are eligible to apply. Proposals are due November 19, 2007.

            Region 9 anticipates awarding approximately 2 to 5 grants or cooperative agreements for the California Coast under this solicitation. Awards will range from approximately $500,000 to no more than $1,000,000 each with project periods of three to five years. A minimum non-federal match of 25 percent of the total cost of the proposal is generally required.

            For additional information, see: http://www.epa.gov/region09/funding/wcei.html.

 

Pulling Together Initiative Grant Period Open 8/8/07

            The RFP for the 2008 PTI grants has been posted to the NFWF web site at www.nfwf.org/pti.  The Pulling Together Initiative (PTI) provides support on a competitive basis for the formation of local Weed Management Area (WMA) partnerships. These partnerships engage federal resource agencies, state and local governments, private landowners, and other interested parties in developing long-term weed management projects within the scope of an integrated pest management strategy. The goals of PTI are: üTo prevent, manage, or eradicate invasive and noxious plants through a coordinated program of public/private partnerships. üTo increase public awareness of the adverse impacts of invasive and noxious plants.

            PTI grants are financed by funds from federal agencies, which must be matched by cash or in-kind contributions from state, local, and private partners on at least a 1:1 basis. Proposal submission is invited and encouraged nationwide. All proposals are reviewed by a national steering committee composed of weed management experts from government, industry, academia, and non-profit organizations.  This Request for Proposals will fund projects occurring between May 1, 2008, and September 30, 2009.

            Preproposals are due October 26, 2007.  Successful preproposal applicants will be invited to submit full proposals by December 14, 2007.

 

River Parkways Grant Program 8/8/07

            The Proposition 50 California River Parkways Grant Program in the Resources Agency is a competitive grant program for river parkways projects. Eligible projects must provide public access or be a component of a larger parkway plan that provides public access. In addition, projects must meet two of the following conditions:  ü Provide compatible recreational opportunities including trails for strolling, hiking, bicycling, and equestrian uses along rivers and streams.  ü Protect, improve, or restore riverine or riparian habitat, including benefits to wildlife habitat and water quality.  ü Maintain or restore the open-space character of lands along rivers and streams so that they are compatible with periodic flooding as part of a flood management plan or project.  ü Convert existing developed riverfront land into uses consistent with river parkways.  ü Provide facilities to support or interpret river or stream restoration or other conservation activities.   For more information visit: http://resources.ca.gov/bonds_prop50riverparkway.htmlApplications are due October 19, 2007. (sorry about the late notice. – dc)

 

ESRI Updates Grant Assistance Program 6/29/07

            The ESRI Grant Assistance Program (GAP) is a free program that helps GIS users find the best grants to suit their needs and assists with their grant applications. In the past, the Non-ESRI-Sponsored Grants Program worked as a grant notification service, sending e-mails about grants released a specific interest area.

            Rather than sending notifications, users can now request information on the grants that best suit their organization and its needs. You can receive personalized attention through a Customized Funding Solution Report that includes information on grants most applicable to your project and organization and details about their free services.

            Their web site has been fully updated to feature helpful resources on the process of finding and applying for funding including helpful links to federal agencies and a simple online Assistance Request Form that you can use to request help in finding funding, obtaining information on specific grants, or applying for a specific grant. Visit www.esri.com/grants to see the new changes!

 

 

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Educational Opportunities

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California Weed Science Society Annual Conference (Monterey)

            The 60th Annual Conference of the California Weed Science Society will be held on January 28 – 30, 2008 at the beautiful Portola Plaza Hotel at Fisherman’s Wharf in Monterey, California.  The theme will be “Everyone Benefits from Weed Control”.  Seventeen hours of DPR continuing education credit will be available. More information and registration is available at www.cwss.org.

            The call for research and student posters is still open.  Titles are due November 30, 2007 and abstracts are due December 31, 2007.

 

Roadside Weed Management Book Available 10/2/07

            With the publication of Roadside Weed Management, by Bonnie L Harper-Lore, Maggie Johnson, & Mark W. Skinner, the Federal Highway Administration in partnership with the Environmental Protection Agency, and Natural Resources Conservation Service, presents a sequel reference to the 1999 Roadside Use of Native Plants.  The new reference features a state-by-state analysis of noxious weed law for all land managers.  It also offers expert essays on the issues common to the "war on weeds" waged by all federal, State, and local agencies across the country.  And finally the reference includes educational examples that have increased public awareness at various levels.

            This joint effort to go beyond the law and policy of weeds to the applied science of weed control and management succeeds only because so many contributors have chosen to "pull together" since 1994.  This book is intended to help the reader confront the complex issue of weeds or invasive plants and encourage on-the-ground partnerships across fencelines.  Weeds ignore political boundaries and so will the partnerships of the future.

            How to order:  Roadside Weed Management has been distributed to all Greener Roadside readers, along with State Departments of Transportation, FHWA Division Offices, and Resource Centers.  All FICMNEW agencies will have a limited supply available from their Invasive Species Manager in agency headquarters.  After October 1, 2007, copies may be ordered directly from the FHWA warehouse by faxing your request for Pub. No. FHWA-HEP-07-017 to: (301) 386-5394, attention -- Johnny Booze.  Your book or books will be shipped directly to the address you supply.

 

3d Edition of "Ecology of Weeds and Invasive Plants: Relationship to Agriculture and Natural Resource Management " Released

            The University of California announced the release of Ecology of Weeds and Invasive Plants: Relationship to Agriculture and Natural Resource Management (Wiley-Interscience, 2007), a classic reference authored by Jodie S. Holt, a professor of plant physiology at the University of California, Riverside; Steven R. Radosevich of Oregon State University; and Claudio M. Ghersa of the University of Buenos Aires, Argentina.  The book details how weeds and invasive plants develop and interact in their new environment, and how people can manage and control them.

            The first edition of the book, published by Wiley in 1987, described principles of ecology and explained the relationships of weeds to agricultural development. The second edition, published by Wiley in 1997, dramatically expanded the subject matter by including chapters on weed demography, interference, methods to study weed/crop interactions, and the physiology of competition. It also included three chapters on weed control and for the first time introduced social and ethical concerns that can arise from that practice.
            In the just released third edition, the authors maintain the basic structure of the earlier editions, but expand the topics to include exotic invasive plants of wildland ecosystems, as well as weeds in agriculture and other managed systems. They also update the previous texts with more recent references and provide different as well as additional examples.

            For the complete news release, visit http://news.ucanr.org/newsstorymain.cfm?story=1032

 

2007 Tamarisk Symposium

            The Tamarisk Coalition and CSU Extension are hosting the 2007 Tamarisk Symposium at the Two Rivers Convention Center, in the heart of downtown Grand Junction, Colorado, on Wednesday, October 24th –Friday, October 26th  This conference, held every two years, is considered the preeminent conference on the tamarisk problem and will bring together nearly 300 people from throughout the West that include key researchers, on-the-ground program managers, environmental interests, and federal/ Tribal/ state/local interests to better understand the nature of the tamarisk problem, and develop and implement long-term solutions.

            Session topics range from revegetation, research summaries from the 2006 Tamarisk Research Conference, restoration projects, the role of NRCS and its partners, a special session on Russian olive, an update on legislation, funding, and policy, and more! The Symposium’s focus is on implementation and is a sister conference to the 2006 Tamarisk Research Conference. For more information on these past conferences visit www.tamariskcoalition.org. For a complete agenda, registration information, hotel accommodations, and poster and booth registration please visit: www.coopext.colostate.edu/TRA/Special/2007Tamarisk/2007Tamarisk.htm.

 

 

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Condolences

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Peggy Rose 1960-2007 7/4/07

            Peggy Young-Rose died on July 4, 2007.  Peggy was an integral part of the Ventura County environmental community as well as the face behind the Ventura County Resource Conservation District for many years.  She was instrumental in the work of the Ventura County Arundo Task Force which expanded to form the Ventura County Weed Management Area in 2006.  We will miss her!

 

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More news. . .

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(Here is a section where I place items of interest in the weed field that are not strictly related to Santa Barbara County or California. – dc)

 

Texas Invasives Plant Conference

            On November 14, 15, and 16, 2007, the Pulling Together Initiative will host the second statewide conference on invasive plants at the Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center in Austin, Texas. Building off the first statewide invasive plant conference in 2005, the 2007 conference will be a professional level meeting including keynotes, concurrent sessions, posters, field trips and symposia. This conference is designed to serve scientists, land managers, state and federal agencies, local governments, the green industry and other professionals interested in invasive species issues in the state of Texas.  For more information visit http://www.texasinvasives.org/conference07/conference.html

 

Natural Areas Conference (Ohio)

            It's not too late to register for the Natural Areas Conference and attend the Midwest Invasive Plant Network annual meeting and special session on Invasive Plants in the Midwest, co-sponsored by the Ohio Invasive Plants Council.  Information on the program is available on the MIPN website at www.mipn.org. To register, visit http://naturalarea.org/07conference/default.htm.

 

Rocky Mountain Conference on Invasive Species (Montana)

Invasive Species in Natural Areas: A Conference on Impacts and Management

13-14 February 2008

Missoula, Montana

            A conference at the interface between applied research and management of invasive species in natural areas: During two days, university and agency researchers will meet with land managers of the Rocky Mountain States to discuss possibilities and problems specific to the management of invasive species in natural areas.

            In three concurrent sessions, presenters will address impacts, management, and restoration practices for invasive species in natural areas.

Presentations will attempt to provide answers to the following four underlying questions:

     * Individual invasive species management versus community oriented management; what do we want to see when we look at natural areas?

     * Restoration with exotic versus native species; how native do natural areas have to be?

     * Greatly degraded natural areas; what can we do besides throwing our hands up?

     * Invasive species replacement; how do we break out of the vicious cycle?

In addition, participants will discuss the formation of a Rocky Mountain EPPC (Exotic Plant Pest Council)

 

Hawaii Landscape Architects Developing List of Invasive Plants to Avoid 8/15/07

            The American Society of Landscape Architects (ASLA) Hawai‘i Chapter is developing a recommended list of potentially invasive plants to avoid using within the industry. The ASLA Executive Committee has determined three basic approaches to best address the invasive plant issue: ü Develop a more proactive approach. ü Use more caution in choosing plants. ü Continue to use plants that have more benefit than risk. For more information, visit: http://www.hawaiireporter.com/story.aspx?be25bc22-2d62-486e-a076-c1bd8a21ae28

 

EPA Releases Draft on Effects of Climate Change on Aquatic Invasive Species… 8/10/07

            EPA announces the release of the draft document, Effects of Climate Change on Aquatic Invasive Species and Implications for Management and Research (External Review Draft) in the Aug 10, 2007 Federal Register Notice. The draft document, available at http://cfpub.epa.gov/ncea/cfm/recordisplay.cfm?deid=180043, is provided for a 30-day public viewing and comment period.  Public comments received on the document before Sept 10th will be provided to the external peer reviewers for their consideration. Any comments not received within the requested time period, may not be considered by EPA in the final report.  (Sorry, the comment period is apparently over, but I thought some of you might be interested in the document. – dc)

 

Long Island Passes Stringent Anti-invasives Bill 7/12/07

            The Suffolk County, N.Y., Legislature passed a resolution last week banning the sale of 63 plants deemed threats to Long Island's ecology. The first of its kind in New York, the bill calls for plant wholesalers and retailers to phase out 58 trees, shrubs and aquatic plants by 2009, and another 7 by 2011. Some nursery owners had resisted an earlier version of the bill, saying it included plants whose sterile varieties pose little threat. The compromise took some plants off the no-sale list. Earlier in June, the N.Y. Legislature passed a bill setting up a council on invasive species to develop a statewide management plan for invasive plants and animals.   

2008 Weeds Across Borders Conference (Canada)

            The 2008 Weeds Across Borders Conference will be held May 27-30, 2008 in Banff, Alberta and is hosted by the Alberta Invasive Plants Council in partnership with U.S. Federal Highway Administration, Okanogan County Noxious Weed Control Board and the North American Weed Management Association (NAWMA).

            This is an international conference covering the interests of professionals and organizations involved in weed management and regulation. It is composed of an affiliation of organizations from various jurisdictions across North America with a common interest in sharing information and promoting weed management throughout North America.

            Because weeds do not obey human imposed laws or boundaries, we must develop partnerships, share information, coordinate programs and projects that cross these boundaries.

            Visit http://www.invasiveplants.ab.ca/WAB2008.htm for further information.

 

 

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Acknowledgement

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This newsletter is compiled from various sources, including emails I receive from people who are involved in the invasive weed field, and from listserves.  I modify the emails, but sometimes they are inserted here nearly verbatim.  I thank those people for this information and for their devotion to protecting and conserving habitat.  If you recognize something that you wrote and object to its use here or on my website, contact me and I will promptly remove it from my website.

 

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Sincerely,

David Chang

Agricultural Commissioner's Office

County of Santa Barbara

(805) 681-5600

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