Identifying Invasive
Plants
On Wednesday, June 26, 2013 the Ipswich Conservation
Commission will be premiering their latest educational video. The title of this
video is ‘Invasive Plants: Identification and Eradication’. It will be shown at
the Ipswich Town Hall in Room A at 7 p.m.. Invasive plant species are non-native plants that are
aggressive in growth and are quickly replacing our native plants. They are
destructive to a variety of environmental habitats and pose an enormous threat
to our native plant biodiversity. They also jeopardize our native insects,
birds and animals that have evolved with our native plants and depend on them
for food, shelter and habitat. This event is open to the general public and is
free of charge.
This video will be focusing on five specific invasive plants
that are commonly found in our local environment: Oriental Bittersweet, Multiflora
Rose, Autumn Olive, Japanese Knotweed and Glossy Buckthorn. The goal of this
video is to enable the landowner to identify these invasive plants, learn how
to remove them and properly dispose of them. In other words, ‘Know them and
don’t grow them’.
This is the latest in the series of five educational videos
dealing with pertinent environmental issues concerning Ipswich and the North
Shore. All five videos have been produced by Conservation Commissioner,
Catherine Carney-Feldman as part of the Ipswich Conservation Commission’s
educational initiative. Well known wetlands/environmental specialist, Mike
DeRosa of Derosa Environmental Consultants of Ipswich, collaborated with Ms
Carney-Feldman and is featured in this video.
For further information about this video or the other
four videos: ‘The Coastal Zone’, ‘The River Zone’, ‘Inland Wetlands’ and
‘Vernal Pools’, please contact the Ipswich Conservation Commission at 978
356-6661 or view them at your convenience on your computer by going to www.icamipswich@yahoo.com and look
for them under videos.
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