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FOR RESTORING INVADED PRAIRIES

Regional Strategies for Restoring Invaded Prairies
Participating States/Provinces: Oregon, Washington and British Columbia
Length of Project: Five years
Amount of Award: $499,935
For more information, please contact
, Associate Director of Stewardship, The Nature Conservancy.
General Significance of Project:
Controlling
invasive species poses one of the most critical challenges in managing
prairies in the Willamette Valley - Puget Sound - Georgia Basin (WPG)
ecoregion. However, current knowledge regarding the effectiveness
of techniques for controlling many herbaceous invasives is largely
anecdotal. To restore native biodiversity to these prairies, managers
must develop effective combinations of treatments that produce lasting
effects based on scientifically-based strategies. This project is
one of the first in the Nature Conservancy to take a systematic and
comprehensive approach to developing restoration strategies in an
endangered community type across an entire ecoregion. By working from
the outset in close collaboration with many land managers, the project
will significantly influence the long-term management of key prairies
throughout the region.
Goals of Project:
To address critical needs in prairie restoration, this project addresses
two primary goals:
- Evaluate and improve strategies for controlling the abundance
of invasive non-native herbaceous weeds, while maintaining or
enhancing the abundance and diversity of native plant species.
- Develop an approach to generalize these results so that they
can be applied by prairie managers throughout the region.
The primary focus is on restoring upland prairies that have been
moderately to extensively invaded by non-native perennial grasses,
but where some native species still remain. The project will achieve
these goals by establishing experimental treatment plots replicated
across sites from Oregon to British Columbia, in which multiple treatments
will be applied and evaluated over a 5-year experiment.
Achievements to Date:
- Held a meeting with all major partners in the project, including
scientists, statistician, and land managers, to establish the
needed working relationships for the project, and to reach consensus
on the initial phase of the project study design.
- Established a project web site to make public our intended action,
extend its impact, and keep our partners updated (see http://www.appliedeco.org/prairie_restoration.html).
- Installed study plots and collected data on vegetation variables
at 11 sites in 2005 and 2006.
- Compiled and checked data from all sites into a single database.
- Applied mowing, herbicide, burning, and seed addition treatments
in 2005 and 2006.
- Collected soil samples from all sites and completed preliminary
soil analyses.
- Continued developing analysis of plant trait information for
generalizing results among species.
- Submitted proposal to the National Science Foundation to extend
project funds with research to include mechanisms behind observed
experimental results.
- Held mid-project meeting with collaborating partners to plan
future experimental treatments.
- Presented project design and preliminary results at several
scientific and community meetings.
- Working with Ph.D. student to augment project through added
research on seedling recruitment.
- Working with undergraduate student for a senior project on weed
and native seed production.
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