(Press-News.org) Two-thirds of all forest inventory plots in the Northeast and Midwestern United States contain at least one non-native plant species, a new U.S. Forest Service study found. The study across two dozen states from North Dakota to Maine can help land managers pinpoint areas on the landscape where invasive plants might take root.
"We found two-thirds of more than 1,300 plots from our annual forest inventory had at least one introduced species, but this also means that one-third of the plots had no introduced species," said Beth Schulz, a research ecologist at the Pacific Northwest Research Station who led the study, which is published in the current issue of the journal Environmental Monitoring and Assessment. "By describing forest stands with few or no introduced species, we help managers focus on areas where early detection and rapid response can be most effective to slow the spread of introduced and potentially invasive plant species."
Nonnative, or introduced, plants are those species growing in areas where they are not normally found. Whether they were intentionally released or escaped cultivation, nonnative plants ultimately can become invasive, displacing native species, degrading habitat, and altering critical ecosystem functions.
Schulz and her colleague Andrew Gray, a research forester at the station, analyzed data gathered by the Northern Research Station's Forest Inventory and Analysis (FIA) Program, which collects and reports statistics on the condition of forests in a 24-state region as part of its regular surveys. The data set, collected from 2001 to 2008, includes a sample of all trees, shrubs, vines, herbs, grasses, fern and fern-like plants conducted on a subset of the region's FIA plots.
Among the study's findings:
There are 305 introduced plant species growing in the region's forests, including some not currently found on regional monitoring lists;
Multiflora rose (which was recorded on over one-quarter of all plots studied), Japanese honeysuckle, and garlic mustard are among the most prevalent nonnative species;
The presence of nonnative species increases as the level of forest fragmentation increases;
Forests surveyed within the Eastern Broadleaf ecological province—which runs from the Atlantic coastal plains of Maine and New Hampshire to the southwest into Ohio and into the high hills and semi-mountainous areas of West Virginia—contain the greatest assortment of introduced plant species.
The study's results can help focus research on individual species more widely distributed than previously thought or with yet-unexplored potential to become problematic.
###
The Pacific Northwest Research Station—headquartered in Portland, Ore.—generates and communicates scientific knowledge that helps people make informed choices about natural resources and the environment. The station has 11 laboratories and centers located in Alaska, Oregon, and Washington and about 390 employees.
In the Northeast, forests with entirely native flora are not the norm
New study is first to reveal abundance of nonnative plants across 24 states
2013-05-01
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Chemo, radiation followed by surgery improves survival in lung cancer patients
2013-05-01
In one of the largest observational studies of its kind, researchers report that a combination of chemotherapy and radiation followed by surgery in patients with stage 3 non-small cell lung cancer improves survival.
Patients who had chemoradiation therapy followed by surgery had twice the five-year survival rate of those who had only chemoradiation, says Dr. Matthew Koshy, a radiation oncologist at the University of Illinois Hospital & Health Sciences System and lead author of the study.
The study, published online in the Journal of Thoracic Oncology, looked at various ...
Advancing emergency care for kids: Emergency physicians do it again
2013-05-01
WASHINGTON —Most children with isolated skull fractures may not need to stay in the hospital, which finding has the potential to save the health care system millions of dollars a year ("Isolated Skull Fractures: Trends in Management in U.S. Pediatric Emergency Departments"). In addition, a new device more accurately estimates children's weights, leading to more precise drug dosing in the ER ("Evaluation of the Mercy TAPE: Performance Against the Standard for Pediatric Weight Estimation"). Two studies published online this month in Annals of Emergency Medicine showcase ...
Rice study: Professional culture contributes to gender wage inequality in engineering
2013-05-01
HOUSTON – (April 30, 2013) – Women engineers are underpaid for their contributions to technical activities, due to cultural ideologies in the engineering profession, according to Rice University research.
"Cultural ideologies within professions may seem benign and have little salience outside of a profession's boundaries, but may play an important role in wage inequality," said Rice Assistant Professor of Sociology Erin Cech.
To study the engineering profession, Cech used National Science Foundation survey data to demonstrate that patterns of sex segregation and unequal ...
Penn research helps to show how turbulence can occur without inertia
2013-05-01
Anyone who has flown in an airplane knows about turbulence, or when the flow of a fluid — in this case, the flow of air over the wings — becomes chaotic and unstable. For more than a century, the field of fluid mechanics has posited that turbulence scales with inertia, and so massive things, like planes, have an easier time causing it.
Now, research led by engineers at the University of Pennsylvania has shown that this transition to turbulence can occur without inertia at all.
The study was conducted by associate professor Paulo E. Arratia and graduate student Lichao ...
Targeted C. difficile screening at hospital admission could potentially ID most colonized patients
2013-05-01
Washington, DC, April 30, 2013 – Testing patients with just three risk factors upon hospital admission has potential to identify nearly three out of four asymptomatic carriers of C. difficile, according to a new study published in the May issue of the American Journal of Infection Control, the official publication of the Association for Professionals in Infection Control and Epidemiology (APIC).
Researchers from Mayo Clinic in Rochester, MN, analyzed stool samples from 320 patients showing no symptoms of C. difficile at hospital admission using a real-time polymerase ...
Nephrologist follow-up improves mortality of severe acute kidney injury patients
2013-05-01
TORONTO, April 30, 2013—Patients with acute kidney injury who see a nephrologist within 90 days of being discharged from a hospital have a 24 per cent lower risk of dying than those who do not see a kidney specialist, a new study has found.
The benefit of seeing a nephrologist was most pronounced in individuals who had not previously seen a nephrologist, and likely had new onset kidney disease, according to the study by Dr. Ziv Harel of St. Michael's Hospital.
The study appears in the May issue of the journal Kidney International.
Acute kidney injury (acute renal failure ...
Estrogen fuels autoimmune liver damage
2013-05-01
A life-threatening condition that often requires transplantation and accounts for half of all acute liver failures, autoimmune hepatitis is often precipitated by certain anesthetics and antibiotics. Researchers say these drugs contain tiny molecules called haptens that ever so slightly change normal liver proteins, causing the body to mistake its own liver cells for foreign invaders and to attack them. The phenomenon disproportionately occurs in women, even when they take the same drugs at the same doses as men.
Results of the new study, described in the April issue of ...
How to manage motorway tolls through the Game Theory
2013-05-01
This press release is available in Spanish.
The team led by José Manuel Zarzuelo,Professor of Applied Economics, has applied the co-operative Game Theory to calculating motorway toll charges. The results of the study have been published in the specialised journal European Journal of Operational Research. In this study, the authors propose that sophisticated mathematical methods could be used in traffic management.
"Yes, it can be done," explains Jose Manuel Zarzuelo. "In the United States it's been done on public highways; yet in the case of Spain most of the motorways ...
How some cancers 'poison the soil' to block metastasis
2013-05-01
NEW YORK (April 30, 2013) -- Cancer spread or metastasis can strike unprecedented fear in the minds of cancer patients. The "seed and the soil" hypothesis proposed by Stephen Paget in 1889 is now widely accepted to explain how cancer cells (seeds) are able to generate fertile soil (the microenvironment) in distant organs that promotes cancer's spread. However, this concept does not explain why some tumors do not spread or metastasize.
Scientists at Weill Cornell Medical College have now solved this mystery by showing that metastatic incompetent cancers actually poison ...
Low vitamin D levels a risk factor for pneumonia
2013-05-01
A University of Eastern Finland study showed that low serum vitamin D levels are a risk factor for pneumonia. The risk of contracting pneumonia was more than 2.5 times greater in subjects with the lowest vitamin D levels than in subjects with high vitamin D levels. The results were published in Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health.
The follow-up study carried out by the UEF Institute of Public Health investigated the link between serum vitamin D3 and the risk of contracting pneumonia. The study involved 1,421 subjects living in the Kuopio region in Eastern Finland. ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Researchers watch a single catalytic grain do work in real time
AI that measures its own uncertainty could improve liver cancer detection
City of Hope study demonstrates proof of concept for targeted new approach to treat pancreatic cancer
Flex appeal: ‘Trade-off’ between armor and efficiency in sea turtle shells
Spray drying tech used in instant coffee applied to high-capacity battery production
Understanding consumer dynamics in community-supported agriculture in Japan
Cannabidiol therapy could reduce symptoms in autistic children and teenagers
Do “completely dark” dark matter halos exist?
In Guatemala, painted altar found at Tikal adds new context to mysterious Maya history
3 schools win NFL PLAY 60 grants to boost student fitness
Urinals without splashback
Even under stress, male-female pairs had each other’s backs
Predictable visual stimuli as an early indicator for autism spectrum disorder in children
AI threats in software development revealed in new study from The University of Texas at San Antonio
Funding to support mental health at work is failing to deliver results
The Lancet: Nearly 500,000 children could die from AIDS-related causes by 2030 without stable PEPFAR programmes, expert policy analysis estimates
Eclipse echoes: groundbreaking study reveals surprising avian vocal patterns during solar eclipse
Mirvie announces results from largest molecular study in pregnancy and clinical validation of simple blood test to predict risk for preeclampsia months before symptoms
Eating only during the daytime could protect people from heart risks of shift work
Discovery of mitochondrial protein by researchers at Lewis Katz School of Medicine at Temple University opens path to therapeutic advances for heart and Alzheimer’s disease
Recognizing the bridge builders between neuroscience and psychiatry
Lactic acid bacteria can improve plant-based dairy alternatives
Public housing smoking ban reduced heart attacks and strokes
Positron emission tomography in psychiatry: Dr. Romina Mizrahi maps the molecular future
Post-trauma drug blocks fear response in female mice, study shows
Trees could be spying on illegal gold mining operations in the Amazon rainforest
Even after a thousand bends, performance remains uncompromised!
Survey: Women’s perceptions of perimenopause
Singapore scientists pioneer non-invasive 3D imaging to transform skin cancer management
Powerful new tool promises major advances in cancer treatment
[Press-News.org] In the Northeast, forests with entirely native flora are not the normNew study is first to reveal abundance of nonnative plants across 24 states