CONSERVATION IN ACTION
The Montezuma Alliance for the Restoration of Species & Habitats, otherwise known as MARSH!, is a program established in 2009 in support of habitat restoration efforts put forth by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. Volunteers join refuge workers to control invasive species that have spread throughout the refuge by surveying and removing invasive plants as well as planting and monitoring the growth of native species.
Every spring, the MARSH! volunteer program meets twice a week for seven weeks to remove invasive species while the soil is still damp. Come summer, it becomes nearly impossible to pull entire root systems when removing the invasive species. If roots remain intact, the plant may regenerate in the following years rendering the effort futile. Invasive species also typically sprout leaves and flowers before native species, making them easy to identify early in the year.
One of the over 20 invasive species monitored on the Montezuma National Wildlife Refuge is the Japanese barberry. This plant, like many invasive species, was intentionally planted by people throughout the country as an ornamental; the plant’s red berries served as decoration in the front of houses. What many saw as merely a pretty shrub turned into a massive problem for much of the country. Over time, the barberry changes the pH levels of the soil it grows in to promote the growth of more barberry while decreasing the ability of native plants to survive. This alters the entire ecosystem. Established barberry plants create dense underbrush with snaking, interconnected root systems which further prevents the growth of native plant species and decreases the overall biodiversity. The dense thickets of barberry also create the ideal habitat for tick populations to flourish, posing a potential public health risk for people in the area.
The removal of invasive species is a long and arduous process — the berries of the Japanese barberry can survive in the ground for up to nine years before sprouting, for example. When Nicholas Vermeulen, a biological science technician for the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service who is a seasonal worker at Montezuma National Wildlife Refuge, encountered a barberry plant that had been missed during the previous year’s surveying and had sprouted berries, he carefully plucked every one of the small red fruit he could find before sealing them away in his backpack to ensure more plants wouldn’t sprout up in the area.
Vermeulen has been fighting invasive species on the refuge for several years. He expects it will take another 5 years of work before the Japanese barberry is eliminated from the refuge. To accomplish this goal, MARSH! volunteers annually walk through the refuge and dig out every barberry plant they encounter. Dug-out plants are hung in the crook of tree branches with the roots pointing skyward. The sun dries the roots, rendering the plant unviable which ensures it will no longer produce berries and continue to spread through the refuge. Volunteers and workers perform a similar process with honeysuckle and multiflora rose, while other invasive species are countered with chemical treatments.