Journal archives for October 2014

October 15, 2014

Kickin off

Holy moly. You guys are awesome. 348 observations so far and a lot of ground covered. That is great. Looks like we're finding a lot of scattered buckthorn and honeysuckle in these areas, but a couple species stand out as being kind of isolated: barberry, multiflora rose, and bittersweet. Already I feel like a useful picture is beginning to be developed.

I downloaded (but haven't mapped) the first set of data to see how it looks and see if the spacing between frequently observed species is more than is necessary or not. Jamie had asked if there was a way to speed up the process since the 100' feels tight and he could go a lot faster if he was documenting things less frequently. I'll check out how things are looking on the map and get back to you. It is a fine balance between going fast and producing a useful data set, but if wider spacing results in the same quality data (but more miles covered) that is a good thing.

Thank you so much for taking such great pictures now. It makes it very easy to verify the species, and frankly there were a few pictures that were actually quite beautiful.

Are folks making use of the guide for all of the species when you've had ID trouble? Is it useful? Did we even talk about it?

The guide is accessible and downloadable for use when there is no cell service. Click on Guides on the bottom tab and search for Chittenden County you'll come up with a guide Chittenden County, Vermont - Invasives. Without download it is available with cell service, but will only be useful if you download it if no cell service exists.

The guide has a list of all (most) of the invasive plants that threaten new england forests. Its got pictures (swipe the picture of the plant to see more), descriptions and things like that. It may be useful for some of the plants that have been misidentified like mile a minute weed, Japanese stilt grass and bittersweet. When you download the guide, all 49 species will be in one window, it can be hard to find the one you're looking for. If you swipe to the left you will see a breakout of the plants: grasses, shrubs, trees, etc. This might help to narrow down a search. Please email or message me with any questions!

Happy mapping!

Posted on October 15, 2014 10:31 PM by kothomps kothomps | 1 comment | Leave a comment

October 19, 2014

Japanese Stiltgrass

Hi all,
again another great push of observations! Thank you.

I am noticing that folks are recording observations of Japanese stiltgrass. I am not sure how familiar folks are with this species or the other invasive grasses that may be found in the area (there are many). To my knowledge Japanese stiltgrass has not been identified in Vermont. Which means, any observation of Japanese stiltgrass that does turn out to be accurate is a big deal. Please be sure to take a photograph of the specific features you used to identify the grass as Japanese stiltgrass and not another densely growing grass like reed canary grass.

A few quick identifying features for Japanese stiltgrass (that I have never personally seen):

  1. It often has a band of white/silvery hairs down the center of the leaf blade, along the midvein.
  2. It is really easy to pull out.
  3. The leaf blades are often asymmetrical with the distance from the midvein of the blade larger on one side to the other.

Here is the link to gobotany's account of Japanese stiltgrass: https://gobotany.newenglandwild.org/species/microstegium/vimineum/

Here is the link for reed canary grass: https://gobotany.newenglandwild.org/species/phalaris/arundinacea/

Posted on October 19, 2014 02:27 PM by kothomps kothomps | 0 comments | Leave a comment

October 20, 2014

Progress!

Hi everybody!
We've got about 20 miles done so far! I think it is really great and going to be very useful.

After downloading the observations from iNaturalist and mapping them in GIS it becomes pretty clear that we don't need the frequency of honeysuckle and buckthorn observations. I understand that it is slowing down the process and in the mapping it obscures the picture a little bit. The observation spacing for common buckthorn and honeysuckle ranged between 100 and 400' I think that 300' tells the story. Feel free to use this spacing for common buckthorn and honeysuckle.

For less common species that are growing densely but not as widespread please maintain the current spacing. It is clear that we've got pockets of barberry, multiflora rose, bittersweet, etc. Being able to recognize these localized infestations is going to be the coolest part of the mapping project.

Thanks again! I know folks were shooting for 50 miles of road mapped, which I think will be a stretch at this point, and that is okay. If we got 35 or 40 miles done, that would be a huge success. With the final mapping push lets try to connect the dots on some of these roads, this could include Snipe Island Road (south from Nashville Rd) and Snipe Ireland Road (north from Rt 2), Dugway Road (btwn Huntington Rd and Cochran Rd.).

Does anybody know a game plan for the mapping? Who's doing what roads? I was gonna go out on Wednesday and do a couple hours to add to the project, but don't want to map where somebody was planning to do it already. Let me know. - kt

Posted on October 20, 2014 09:30 PM by kothomps kothomps | 0 comments | Leave a comment

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