An invasive species of plant has arrived in our Potomac
River Watershed. It was first observed by John Odenkirk a biologist with the
Virginia Department of Wildlife Resources who discovered the beginnings of the
current outbreak in Pohick Bay in 2014. With the help of Dr. Nancy Rybicki
formerly of the U.S. Geological Survey and now teaching at George Mason
University, the plant was identified as a native of East Asia . This is not the
same type of Water Chestnut (Eurasian) that blanketed much of the Potomac in
the 1950s. This is a new species of water chestnut. The new plant has leaves
with the same serrated pattern, but the underside of this new species is red.
This species has pink flowers and the seed pods which form this time of year
have two hooks on them.
Once water chestnut shows up in a water body, it spreads to cover large areas
chocking out all other life. If allowed to flower and reproduce, can spread far
and wide carried by Canadian geese, other wild life and the flow of the rivers
and streams. This plant forms dense floating mats that cover the water surface,
blocking sunlight and killing aquatic grasses and vegetation. Dr. Nancy Rybicki as been trying to alert owners of ponds and
other water bodies that have been impacted encouraging them to take action
before the Water Chestnut blankets the region.
Across Northern Virginia, this invasive water chestnut has spread to 81 known
locations. Dr. Rybicki believes it can still be stopped before it takes hold,
but we need to act before it spreads to the Potomac River. The Virginia Noxious
Weed Advisory Committee nominated the water chestnut to be designated as a Tier
2 weed in 2019 and it remained mired in the bureaucracy during the pandemic. Since
that time it spread from a handful to 54 locations in 2020 to 81 this year. The
Attorney General’s Office is reviewing the proposal.
It is spreading in stormwater ponds, farm ponds, golf water hazards, and ponds
in parks. Once it flowers with a pink flower it produces its 2 horned fruit
with barbs that attach to wildlife, but are sharp enough to puncture a shoe.
The water chestnut is an aquatic annual herb. It sprouts from seeds in spring
and the plants die off in winter after a hard frost, but the seeds can lie
dormant for several years and be washed from a spill way down river.
If this new water chestnut is allowed to establish itself in
ponds around Virginia it could spread into the tidal waters, and we will face
an epic control challenge that would both undo past decades of successful
eradication of invasive species and undermine all our efforts in restoration of
the Chesapeake Bay. Once established, a colony can smother an entire pond or
lake. The dense mats can block the passage of oxygen in the atmosphere to the water
below and create oxygen-starved expanses where aquatic life is wiped out. The
plant’s long tendrils also impede boat navigation.
Northern Virginia Soil and Water Conservation District
recently obtained about $300,000 from Fairfax County’s Environmental
Improvement Program to fund a staff position to oversee eradication in at least
30 ponds countywide. That amount also covers the cost of contractors to do the
work to hand remove the Water Chestnut.
If added to the Noxious Weed list, the Virginia Department
of Agriculture could use its own resources to suppress populations or reduce
its spread. The classification also would prohibit the movement and sale of
those plants into or within the state without a permit.
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