Contact: Faith Campbell, TNC | fcampbell@tnc.org ANNAPOLIS, MD (December 2, 2007) – Beginning in 2003, reports surfaced of dying redbay trees (Persea borbonia) in coastal areas of Georgia and South Carolina; in 2005 the problem was also found in northeast Florida. Further study confirmed that the cause was a previously unknown fungus Raffaelea lauricola. The pathogen […]
Author: Maryland Invasive Species Council
Another Case of Good Bait, Gone Bad
Contact: Jay Kilian, Maryland DNR | Jkilian@dnr.state.md.us ANNAPOLIS, MD (November 1, 2007) – Rusty crayfish, Orconectes rusticus, was discovered lurking in Marsh Creek, a northern tributary to the Monocacy River in Frederick County, by biologists from the Maryland DNR Maryland Biological Stream Survey in June 2007. This is the first state record of this non-native invasive species […]
Chinese Silvergrass
Contact: K. L. Kyde, Invasive Plant Specialist, Maryland DNRkerrie.kyde@maryland.gov ANNAPOLIS, MD (October 9, 2007) – The beautiful Asian ornamental grass genus Miscanthus, or Silvergrass, contains several species widely planted in gardens throughout the eastern U.S. One of the most frequently used is Miscanthus sinensis, Chinese silvergrass or Eulalia. Over 50 cultivated varieties, or cultivars, have been introduced […]
Tree-of-Heaven is Really Stinking Tree-from-Hell
ANNAPOLIS, MD (September 1, 2007) – Tree-of-Heaven (Ailanthus altissima), also known as ailanthus, stink-tree, stinking or (incorrectly) Chinese sumac or shumac, and by other less than pleasant names, is Maryland’s worst invasive alien tree, and the Maryland Invasive Species Council’s September Invader of the Month. Introduced into the U.S. from China in 1784, it was […]
New Invader Waves a Red Flag
Contact: K. L. Kyde, Maryland Department of Natural Resources kerrie.kyde@maryland.gov ANNAPOLIS, MD (August 6, 2007) – Two small populations of a Eurasian grass never previously found in the US were discovered in Patapsco State Park by sharp-eyed botanists in 1997. Smithsonian Institution experts confirmed its identity as an exotic species of a grass that is […]
Feeling Crabby?
Contact: Jonathan McKnight, Maryland Department of Natural Resources | 410-260-8539 ANNAPOLIS, MD (July 5, 2007) – A newly discovered invader from East Asia could make us all feel crabby, with its potential to do damage to the Chesapeake Bay ecosystem. The Chinese mitten crab (Eriocheir sinensis), in the first documented sighting on the East coast of […]
Asian Vine Climbs into Maryland
Contact: Phil Pannill, Regional Watershed Forester, Maryland Department of Natural Resources, Forest Service | ppannill@dnr.state.md.us ANNAPOLIS, MD (June 4, 2007) – While it sounds like a boon to the neighborhood microbrewery, Japanese Hops is more likely to be the bane of local land managers. This Asian vine, scientific name Humulus japonicus, is not good for beer making, […]
A Royal Procession in Maryland
Contact: Rachel Cliche, US Fish and Wildlife Service | Rachel_Cliche@fws.gov | 410-639-2108 (ext. 222) ANNAPOLIS, MD (May 1, 2007) – Princess tree (Paulownia tomentosa), also known as royal Paulownia or empress tree, is an aggressive ornamental tree that grows rapidly along roadsides, stream banks, forests and rocky slopes. Its ability to sprout prolifically from adventitious buds on stems and […]
Snowstorms in April?
Contact: K. L. Kyde, Maryland Department of Natural Resources | kerrie.kyde@maryland.gov ANNAPOLIS, MD (April 1, 2007) – Maryland roadsides are lit up during April with the white blossoms of Callery pears (Pyrus calleryana). When the first cultivated variety, or cultivar, was promoted to the horticulture industry in the early 1960’s, the small flowering Asian tree seemed […]
MSX (Haplosporidium nelsoni)
Contact: Jonathan A. McKnight, Maryland Department of Natural Resources | 410-260-8539 | jmcknight@dnr.state.md.us ANNAPOLIS, MD (March 9, 2007) – One of the hottest topics in mid-Atlantic conservation is the proposal to introduce a new species of oyster to the Chesapeake Bay. The Asian Oyster, it is argued, would be tougher that our native oyster, and could […]