Category Archives: Articles

Common Ground and Controversy in Native Plant Restoration

The SOMS Debate, Source Distance, Plant Selections, and a Restoration-Oriented Definition of Native

by Thomas N. Kaye

Tom Kaye is Executive Director of the Institute for Applied Ecology, a non-profit organization in Corvallis, Oregon dedicated to natural resource conservation, research, and education. He has a PhD from Oregon State University, where he is a courtesy Assistant Professor in the Department of Botany and Plant Pathology. After working for Olympic National Park (1984-1987), he joined the Oregon Department of Agriculture’s Plant Conservation Biology Program (1988-2000) where he conducted research and contributed to policy for management of threatened and endangered plant species. He has served on the IUCN Species Survival Commission, Re-introduction Specialist Group and is a member of the Native Plant Society of Oregon. Tom specializes in native and endangered plant propagation and restoration, the population dynamics of rare plants, population viability analysis, noxious weed control, development of habitat management and restoration techniques, and monitoring. In addition, his interests include plant-pollinator interactions and plant systematics.

INTRODUCTION

Native plant propagation, restoration, and conservation are complex activities that require many steps and decisions, and face many challenges. On one hand, there is broad agreement, at least among restorationists, over the importance of native plants and the benefits of habitat restoration. But on the other, there is widespread uncertainty and dissent about how to achieve these restoration goals. What should be planted and where? How should plant-materials for restoration be obtained? Where should they come from? What is the overall goal? The objective of this paper is to identify areas of agreement and disagreement to help frame debates in native plant restoration, and thus improve our ability to discuss and conduct this work from a position of mutual understanding and productive dialogue. Continue reading

Prairie Fires & Earth Mounds

The Ethnoecology of Upper Chehalis Prairies

by Linda Storm

Published in the Washington Native Plant Society journal Douglasia 28(3):6-9 – Summer 2004

This spring I spend my days at Mima mounds natural area preserve and glacial heritage prairie in Thurston County, Washington.  I monitor camas distributions on mounds and their inter-mound swales, along north-south gradients.  I record camas phenological stages and the relative abundance of other ethnobotanical species important to the Native peoples of this land. Each day, when the prairie warms up it becomes a-buzz with busy bees, pollinating future camas crops.  Butterflies dance on the breeze, a pair of Northern harriers soar over mounded terrain, and meadowlarks sing happily as I count “Bud – Bud – Flower – Fruit – Fruit – Flower – Flower – Fruit . . .” My volunteer companion, Dale Pressler, records this monotonous drone.  Riffle club shell-fire and a remote-control toy airplane periodically shatter the serenity of our routine. But the prairie’s beauty, the secrets lying dormant in these earth mounds, and my desire to complete my PhD keep me coming back, day after day, week after week. Continue reading

Pioneer Use of Native Plants

by Richard T. Haard, Ph.D., Propagation Manager, Fourth Corner Nurseries

Adapting to the challenges we face in the future includes bringing native plants closer to our everyday lives. Looking at native plants and how we used them in a historical context is important because we need to preserve and recover traditional uses of plants and invent new ways to use them in order to promote their preservation.

Use of Native Plants in the Pacific Northwest

This pertains to the northwestern corner of the United States and adjacent islands of the San Juan Archipelago. Prior to 1859, this area was sparsely inhabited with people of European heritage. Through the 1870s, movement around the area was only possible by canoe or pack train and it was not until the 1890s that wagon roads for freight and stage were in place. Continue reading

“Bio-Structural” Erosion Control

Incorporating Vegetation in Engineering Designs to Protect Puget Sound Shorelines

by Elliott Menashe, Greenbelt Consulting

This article has been adapted from a longer version. The full article, including more references and other interesting articles, is available at http://www.greenbeltconsulting.com.

Elliott Menashe, of Greenbelt Consulting on Whidbey Island Washington, has been a natural resource management consultant since 1989. He received a degree in Forest Management from the University of California at Berkeley in 1975. His firm specializes in marine shoreline, forest, and riparian management, as well as low-impact rural development practices and restoration of degraded sites. He can be reached at:elliott@greenbeltconsulting.com.

I.    INTRODUCTION

Surface erosion and mass soil losses from landslides are of great concern to land managers. Accelerated erosion and slope instability can be caused or exacerbated by human activities. Increased erosion can cause adverse cumulative watershed problems by increasing sedimentation, degrading water supplies, reducing forest productivity, destroying anadromous fish habitat, and degrading other critical environmental functions. Structurally mature and floristically complex plant communities significantly reduce surface erosion and contribute greatly to maintaining slope stability. Management of forested, coastal, urban, agricultural, and riparian areas should conserve plant cover.  The relative effectiveness of vegetation in any specific locale will be a function of site-specific conditions. Continue reading

Seed Collecting and Climate Change

by Richard T. Haard, Ph.D., Propagation Manager, Fourth Corner Nurseries

Every catalog issue I have a chance to write on something that might be interesting to our readers. At times this column has news of our work on native plant cultivation, propagation and marketing. At other times I have tried to link our mutual interests in native plants to contemporary topics such as urbanization, invasive exotics or sustainable agriculture.

This time I would like to tell you about my favorite pastime during late spring, summer and the fall months – seed collecting and to make some observations from my own perspective, a native plant seed collector, on global climate change and our own denial of the problem. Continue reading