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1-03-2007
New DEC office to combat invasive species
The Daily Star
Area organizations dealing with
such issues as zebra mussels and water
chestnuts will be getting some
help, according to a media release
from the state Department of Environmental
Conservation.
The agency announced the formation
of a new office to focus the effort
to combat the problem.
The Office of Invasive Species will
bring together foresters and biologists
to work with universities, state
agencies and nonprofit organizations
to support research and raise awareness.
Biologist Steve Sanford will lead
the effort.
Otsego County Conservation Association
Executive Director Erik
Miller said that having a specific representative
handling the issue will
be a big help.
"More needs to be done," Miller
said, but this move is an indication
the problem is "getting the respect it
deserves."
The greater Oneonta area has not
been immune to invasive species.
In August 2006, efforts were made
to combat an infestation of water
chestnuts on private wetlands behind
Oneida Street in Oneonta.
That Eurasian plant grows thick
and has been known to clog pipes, canals
and waterways, affecting navigation
and power plant infrastructure,
according to Matt Albright,
assistant to the director at the State
University College at Oneonta Biological
Field Station.
Water chestnuts have also been
spotted this year in Otsego
Lake, where a
cleanup day is held in
August to target invasive
species as well as
debris.
Zebra mussels were
found in Otsego Lake
last year and were discovered
in Canadarago
Lake as early as 2002.
Even though many
of the invasive species
have been around for
years, "we have never had a coordinated
system in place to attack the
problem," said DEC Commissioner
Pete Grannis in the release.
The office will provide a system
that threads together the issues of
public outreach, funding, legislation
and research, which is what Miller
said he hoped would happen.
His organization recently received
a $15,600 grant from the DEC to organize
and conduct a three-year program
for the eradication of water
chestnuts on Goodyear Lake.
The program beginning in August
will use manual means instead of
herbicides.
Also included in those DEC Aquatic
Invasive Species Eradication
grants was $28,139 for the SUNY
Research Foundation to eradicate 40
acres of purple loosestrife and water
chestnut from a wetland near
Oneonta. There is a total of $5 million
for invasive species programs in
the 2007-08 state budget for such
grants as well as public outreach
through Cornell Cooperative Extension
and a plan to develop virus-free
planting stock for fruit growers at
the state Agricultural Experiment
Station in Geneva.
Plans call for creating an Institute
of Invasive Species Research at Cornell
University. Humans are suspected
of spreading the problem of
invasive species through infested
wood, boat ballast, bait fish and other
means.
Beside prevention, fast identification
and "rapid response" eradication
are important, Sanford said.
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