Mar 10, 2009, By Lee J. Siegel
Photo: This 2006 infrared image of the confluence of the Colorado and Dolores rivers in Utah was taken by the ASTER instrument on NASA's Terra satellite. The Colorado flows from north to south and the Dolores enters the image from the east. Vegetation appears bright red, including an alfalfa field along the Colorado and a wet "bottom" area along the Dolores that has extensive tamarisk, an invasive tree from Eurasia. (Phil Dennison, University of Utah, from NASA data.)
More than 150 years after a small Eurasian tree named tamarisk or saltcedar started taking over river banks throughout the U.S. Southwest, saltcedar leaf beetles were unleashed to defoliate the exotic invader.
Now, University of Utah scientists say their new study shows it is feasible to use satellite data to monitor the extent of the beetle’s attack on tamarisk, and whether use of the beetles may backfire with unintended environmental consequences.
“We don’t have any idea of the long-term impacts of using the beetles; their release may have unexpected repercussions,” says Philip Dennison, an assistant professor of geography and first author of the study scheduled for online publication later this month in the journal Remote Sensing of Environment.
“The impact of this defoliation is largely unknown,” says study co-author Kevin Hultine, a research assistant professor of biology at the University of Utah. “The net impact of controlling tamarisk could be positive or negative.”
“We would like on-the-ground scientists and managers to understand and think about the long-term impact – what are these riparian [riverbank] areas going to look like 15 years from now, and how can we can maintain ecosystems” as well as water flows for farms, cities and river recreation, Hultine says.
Dennison and Hultine conducted the study with Jim Ehleringer, a distinguished professor of biology at the University of Utah; physical scientist Pamela Nagler, of the U.S. Geological Survey in Tucson, Ariz.; and Edward Glenn, a University of Arizona environmental scientist.
Anyone who has rafted Southwestern rivers like the Green and Colorado knows about the shady thickets of tamarisk that line the riverbanks. The trees can grow up to 30 feet tall. There are about 10 species of tamarisk.
The U.S. Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS) says saltcedar or tamarisk is “a highly invasive, exotic weed” in the form of “a large shrub or small tree that was introduced to North America from Asia in the early 1800s. The plant has been used for windbreaks, ornamentals, and erosion control. By 1850, saltcedar had infested river systems and drainages in the Southwest, often displacing native vegetation.”
“By 1938, infestations were found from Florida to California and as far north as Idaho,” according to APHIS. “Saltcedar continues to spread rapidly and currently infests water drainages and areas throughout the United States.”
Tamarisk dominates riverbank habitats, limiting camping areas for river runners, reducing diversity and providing poor habitat for some species of wildlife. Tamarisk also raises the risk of fires that destroy cottonwoods and other native plants but not tamarisk, which re-sprouts from roots. And tamarisk forms a dense canopy, also helping wipe out competing plants. Finally, tamarisk has a bad rap as a water-sucking wastrel that dries springs, lowers water tables and reduces stream flows, even impairing boating.
Dennison and Hultine say recent research indicates tamarisk’s thirst is overstated.
“Some of the earliest research on tamarisk water use suggested tamarisk uses dramatically more water than other tree species,” Hultine says. “So a lot of estimates on water loss over entire river reaches are based on information that now has been discredited in the scientific
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