Showing posts with label invasive species green roofs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label invasive species green roofs. Show all posts

Saturday, February 5, 2011

Green Roof Plantings for Gainesville Regional Utilities Building Includes Class One Exotic Invasive Species

Note: GRU when made aware of the use of nandina has changed the design plan to exclude the exotic, invasive species.

Green Roofs plants should be selected with care.

Once a green roof plant is installed, the species becomes a significant contributor of plant DNA to the surrounding environment.

A green roof plant is perched high above most other local plant species, subject to seed dispersal by wind, rain and wildlife much more so than plants on the ground.

The proposed Gainesville, Florida's Regional Utilities Building Green Roof planting list contains species listed warned against by the University of Florida's Center for Invasive and Aquatic Plants.

Heavenly Bamboo, Nandina domestica, Invasive Plant
One of the green roof plants, Heavenly Bamboo, Nandina domestica has been placed on the Florida Exotic Pest Plant Council’s invasive list as a Category I species.   For a full listing of those plant species classified as invasive by Florida's Exotic Pest Plant Council click here (website opens in a new window - click on the 2009 Invasive Species list PDF file link).

According to the University of Florida's Center for Invasive and Aquatic Plants website, Heavenly Bamboo, Nandina is not only rapidly spread through seed dispersion from wildlife foraging but "it also spreads vegetatively via suckers and rhizomes. Nandina has the habit of forming dense thickets that displace native vegetation."

The Gainesville Regional Utility's Heavenly Bamboo will be easier for birds to see and access, being planted on the roof and not hidden by ground shrubs and trees.  This will facilitate the spread of the seeds to surrounding natural areas even quicker.

Importantly, the nursery industry realizes Nandina's seeds, spread by wildlife quickly sprout, displace native vegetation.  According to the University of Florida's Center for Invasive and Aquatic Plants website, the nursery industry is working on developing Nandina cultivars that do not produce seed.

However Nandina also colonizes areas by thick and matted rhizome spread and regardless of seed producing or non-seed producing varieties, Heavenly Bamboo should not be used as a green roof plant in Florida.

I can recall our hikes through Indian Head Acres in Tallahassee, just south of Florida's Capitol, with the family and seeing Nandina and Ardesia  taking over as the dominant groundcover shrub in what was once a Beech - Magnolia forest.  

We have posted several articles about the importance of working with a botanist or landscape designer who understands native plant species when designing a green roof.  The Gainesville Regional utility Center is situated only a few miles north of the important Paynes Prairie Preserve, a Florida State Park. 

Allowing Nandina to spread possibly into Paynes Prairie would further compound invasive species problems in the State Park.  Chinese tallow, Sapium sebiferum control has been a costly pest species for Florida to control in Paynes Prairie.

The Paynes Prairie Sweetwater Preserve Management Plan details the concerns about Nandina or Heavenly Bamboo, particularly within the Floodplain Forest areas surrounding the Prairie and indicating the targeting for eradication of invasive species as a priority.

Interestingly, the Center for Invasive Species and Ecosystem Health at the University of Georgia has developed a Google Earth-based exotic and invasive species mapping system called EDDMaps - Early Distribution and Mapping System.  EDDMaps offers a fascinating insight into Heavenly Bamboo distribution across the Southeast.  Heavenly Bamboo occurrences are clustered around the Gainesville area - NOTE:  This link requires Google Earth .

Finally, the USDA's Forest Service, in their publication entitled Silent Invaders of Our Southern Forests references Nandina and suggests "non-native invasive plants may interrupt native succession and eventually displace an entire native ecosystem."

Planting invasive species and providing a seed source atop a building near Central Florida's springs and natural areas is easily avoidable and the planting schedule should be changed to use Florida Friendly plants species of Florida native plant species.

The Florida Friendly Landscape program, an effort of the University of Florida and Florida's Water Management Districts, offers a concise and effective website for designing with ecologically friendly water conservation and ecological concerns.  Moreover, the website offers an interactive online design program to assist in selecting eco-friendly landscape plants.

Additionally, the Florida Native Plant Society offers many resources focused on preserving native ecosystems and plant communities.  Their Education and Outreach webpage makes available an example list of public gardens and natural areas using native plants for landscaping.

I called the green roof design firm and spoke to a designer this morning.  She indicated Nandina had been successfully used on other projects around Gainesville and they had not seen a problem with the plant and would speak with the project's landscape architect and get back in touch. 

We hope the plant will be replaced with another, Florida Friendly green roof plant.  I have not received a response from the landscape architect about the Nandina at the time of this blog posting.  They did however ask us not to use their company name in the blog post.

However, as we've indicated before, Florida green roofs are hostile places for plants - and must take into account at a minimum, the 5 H's - hurricanes, humidity, high desiccating winds,  hard freezes, horrible heat and more.

The green roof plant schedule requires some plant species well equipped for survival on the green roof, such as the Yucca filamentosa and the native Muhlenbergia grass.  In fact, the design calls for no additional irrigation, an exemplary design criteria, especially as Florida is faced with a crushing water crisis.

Moreover, an irrigation system is supposedly being included in the final construction as the green roof plan also includes water dependent plant species such as Camellias, Fan Palms and Windmill Palms.  We might suggest substituting Florida's native Saw Palmetto or Bluestem, Serenoa spp. for the Fan and Windmill Palms.

Ultimately, green roof design must be approached with consideration for many factors most of us do not consider, such as;

  • Native or exotic invasive qualities
  • Drought resistance
  • Wildlife value
  • Fire fuel contributor (high volatile oil content - remember how dry xmas trees burn!)
  • the 5 H's and much more.
Green roofs are a popular trend within the green building industry today.  The offer important benefits including;
  • Cleaning of nutrients from stormwater runoff (if the roof and stock plants are non-fertilized)
  • Providing much needed vertical green habitat to Urban Core wildlife (such as the green Florida anole - which in turn provides superb integrated pest management)
  • Creating beauty for people
  • Sequestering Carbon and CO2 and providing fresh oxygen as a result of photosynthesis, and more.
We must though, be aware of how we embrace green roofs.  We must take into account all issues, especially those with potential impacts on our ecology and environment. Selecting green roof plant species if a good place to start in designing a Florida Green Roof.


As always, email us with your questions and comments here.

Happy Green Roofing!

Kevin

Wednesday, December 8, 2010

Green Roofs and Exotic Invasive Species - Koelreuteria elegans

Koelreuteria elegans is a species we see sprout across Florida green roofs on a regular basis.

The plant was first brought to the USA from Taiwan as a landscape plant.

Koelreuteria elegans is also know as the Golden Rain Tree and offers bright, stunning colors in the fall and winter months.

Each tree produces numerous seeds during the year.  Seeds are then quickly spread by both birds and water - stormwater runoff.

Once the seeds find organic material, dirt or sand they quickly sprout and send out agressive roots.

The plant is now classified as a Class Two Exotic Invasive species by the Florida Exotic Pest Plant Council.

According to the University of Florida's Center for Aquatic and Invasive Plants, the species is difficult to eradicate and has no know biological control mechanism.

The important factor for green roof designers and owners is realizing this species spreads quickly and should not be used as a green roof plant.  Green roof maintenance procedures should identify juvenile sprout appearances so that they may quickly be removed from the green roofs.

Water and Wind Spread Invasive Plant Seeds
It is probably safe to say that it is not 'If" a Florida Green Roof will sprout a volunteer Golden Rain Tree but "When".

The photo here is of a mature Koelreuteria elegans growing on the bank of a creek in Jacksonville, Florida.  Each year thousands of seeds are dropped and picked up by the flowing water and carried about a half mile to Pottsburg Creek and then the St. Johns River.  Over time this one tree has probably contributed tens of thousands of new Golden Rain Trees along the banks of the St. Johns River - each themselves contributing tens of thousands more.

Green Roofs are situated high in the air, and poised much like the tree in the photo here to spread plant genetic matter across a wide geographic range.

Is is therefore important for the green roof designer and the green roof maintenance staff to understand the ecological implications of the "Right Plant Right Place' concept.

As always, email us with your questions or comments here.

Happy Green Roofing!

Kevin