Guardian angels |
| Volunteers across state monitor
rare plant populations |
By Beth Roberts
beth@uga.edu
 |
| Heather Alley and some of the volunteer
Botanical Guardians will be reintroducing these royal
catchfly seedlings in Union County in spring. (Photo by
Peter Frey) |
Heather
Alley, who got her master’s degree at UGA in horticulture,
coordinates the Botanical
Guardians
program in Georgia from the research lab at the State Botanical
Garden. She explained the program to Columns.
Columns: What—or who—are
Botanical Guardians?
Alley: Botanical Guardians is a network of volunteers
across the state of Georgia who monitor rare plant populations
and serve as stewards for rare plant habitats, usually under
powerline right-of-ways.
Columns: Because that’s
where such populations might still be found?
Alley: Yes—a lot of rare plants live under powerline
right-of-ways, because that’s one of our last remaining
places of early successional habitat. Since we don’t
let wildfires burn and Native Americans aren’t clearing
the land, there aren’t many grassland habitats remaining
in the Southeast. Powerlines and roadsides serve as refugia
for early successional species.
The volunteers monitor and visit these powerline sites every
month during the summer. Unfortunately the plants in these
areas are at risk not just from powerline maintenance activities
but also from four-wheel driving and vandalism. The volunteers
report back to the authorities—to the state Department
of Natural Resources or the utility company—so threats
can be dealt with quickly.
Columns: Are there other programs
like this in other states?
Alley: This was modeled after a large network in New
England. They have hundreds of volunteers and a full-time
staff member and do lots of work for the natural resources
departments in those states. In addition to monitoring rare
plant sites, they do things like invasive species removal.
They’re highly trained and they put in hundreds of hours
of work.
Columns: And how long has the
program existed in Georgia?
Alley: A year in full force, three years since it started.
It started with two volunteers at Manassas Bog near Statesboro,
and each year we’ve gotten a couple more volunteers.
Now we’re up to 13 powerline sites and 13 rare species
searches, and this year we’re going to be adding a lot
more.
Columns: Who started it?
Alley: GPCA—the Georgia Plant Conservation Alliance.
It’s a network of institutions that do plant conservation
around the state—botanical gardens, universities, the
Department of Natural Resources, the Forest Service. We collaborate
on projects.
GPCA identified this project as a good way to get more work
done, after seeing the results in New England. There just
aren’t enough people on staff in any of these organizations
to do half of what needs to be done. All our directives come
from the Georgia Natural Heritage Program of the Georgia DNR—they
determine priorities and they have all the data.
Columns: And the volunteers keep
track of their assigned spot?
Alley: Yes. The volunteers live near their site. They
are mostly people who were already concerned about conservation
of threatened and endangered plants. They fill out a rare
plant data sheet every time they go into the field. They do
a count, they list associated species, and they identify threats
they see, like four-wheeling or invasive species encroachment
or horseback riding.
Most of these sites belong to Georgia Power and they’ve
been really cooperative. They’ve posted “Do Not
Mow” signs flanking the plant populations. At one site
hunters have been using the signs for target practice, so
that’s something the volunteers watch for—both
for their own safety (they wear orange vests) and to let us
know when it’s time to replace the signs.
Some of the volunteers really run with this idea—they’re
amazing. One group had an Elliottia party, a barbecue, and
invited everybody in the community so they’d know about
the project and be able to recognize the plants at their site.
Columns: What are the threatened
plants you’re working with?
Alley: Many people know about pitcher plants. We have
five pitcher plant bogs under powerline right-of-ways and
they have many species of pitcher plants—Saracenia—and
rare orchids. One of them has Elliottia racemosa. That’s
the Georgia plume. It’s a tree that’s found only
in Georgia, where it is threatened.
One success story is the royal catchfly, Silene regia. We’re
in the southernmost limit of its range in far northwest Georgia
near Chattanooga, and we’ve been able to do a reintroduction,
doubling the population. It’s really easy to grow. We
collect seeds, bring them back here to the Garden and grow
them, and then plant them back in their native habitat.
Another species we’re working to do that with is fringed
gentian, which is classified as threatened by the state. It’s
a beautiful flower—we’re trying to propagate it,
but it’s tricky to grow.
Columns: There must be concerns
about collecting seeds from an endangered species.
Alley: Yes, there are strict guidelines. There’s
generally a 5 percent rule—if there are 100 flowers,
you can only collect from five. We get official permits from
the botanists at DNR every time. The Silene regia seedlings
we have now are going to be reintroduced this spring.
Columns: Where will they go?
Alley: Union County. Another interesting site is on
a rock outcrop, a really threatened habitat in Georgia. They’ve
been heavily impacted by granite mining, and they’re
desirable places to develop. But there is a whole host of
unique species that grow only there. There’s a lot to
do.
ON THE WEB
www.uga.edu/~gpca/project6.html
Potential volunteers can find out more by e-mailing Alley
at alley@uga.edu
|