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THE NON-NATIVE AQUATIC PLANT INVADERS
1899
An aquatic plant management program in Florida began
after the 55th Congress passed the Rivers and Harbor Act
Authorizing the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (USACE) to
crush, divert, or remove water hyacinth (Eichhornia
crassipes) from access areas of the St. Johns
River. In May, 1899, the Florida Legislature prohibits
planting water hyacinth in "waters of the State of
Florida."
1902 The Rivers and Harbors Act was amended to
allow for the "extermination" of water hyacinth by
mechanical and chemical or any other means. Toxic
sodium arsenite was used in Florida until 1905.
1931 In 1931, the State of Florida passed
Chapter 1465 to allow the use of "any poisonous
substance, chemical or spray in killing water
hyacinth providing no such poisonous substance,
chemical or spray shall be used which might injure fish
life or human or other animal life"
1940s Water hyacinth control operations until
the 1940s were almost exclusively conducted by
mechanical means (crusher boats, saw-boats, and
harvesters). By 1948, the USACE began using 2,4-D to
control water hyacinths and as they decreased, there
was an increase of 2,4-D resistant alligatorweed (Alternanthera
philoxeroides).
1952 With federal funding (Dingell
Johnson Federal Aid to Fisheries Fund), the Florida Game and
Freshwater Fish Commission (now the Florida Fish and
Wildlife Conservation Commission or FWC) began a limited
state program controlling water hyacinth with 2,4-D.
1958 The Expanded Project for Aquatic Plant
Control was approved by Congress in 1958 allowing the
management of additional species not included in the
Rivers and Harbors Act of 1899. The states were
required to provide 30% of the operating funds.
1959 The FWC was designated as the official
state agency to represent Florida in aquatic plant
management operations with the USACE.
1960 A USDA laboratory was established in
Argentina to develop biocontrol agents for alligatorweed.
The alligatorweed flea beetle (Agasicles hygrophila)
was released in Florida in the mid-1960s. The Hyacinth
Control Society (now the Aquatic Plant Management
Society) was formed in 1960 so managers and researchers
could identify and solve water hyacinth problems across
Florida.
1969 Florida Statute 403.271 (now s369.25)
passed to regulate the importation, transportation, and
possession of non-native aquatic plants.
1970 Various hybrids and chromosome morphs of
the Asian grass carp (Ctenopharyngodon idella)
were first used to control hydrilla in Florida by
researchers beginning in 1970. The Florida Legislature
passed the Aquatic Weed Control Act in 1970 authorizing the
Florida Dept. of Natural Resources (now the Dept. of
Environmental Protection) to direct the control,
eradication, and regulation of noxious aquatic weeds and to
direct research and planning related to these activities.
1971 Base funding for aquatic plant
control activities were established by the legislature using
gas taxes and motor boat registration fees.
1972 The mottled water hyacinth weevil (Neochetina
eichhornia) was the first insect approved for
release as a biocontrol agent of water hyacinth.
1973 The concept of maintenance
control was developed by the USACE in 1973 and became state
policy (s369.22(3)) for water hyacinth management in 1976.
1976 Section 403.088 was amended to not require
a water pollution operation permit for putting
herbicides in water providing it is done under a DEP
aquatic plant control permit thus avoiding dual
permitting delays. The Florida Aquatic Plant Management
Society was formed in 1976 to facilitate interagency
sharing of management techniques.
1978 The Center for Aquatic Weeds (now the
Center for Aquatic and Invasive Plants), devoted to the
study and management of freshwater aquatic and wetland
plants, was established in 1978 at the University of
Florida.
1979 The American Assembly
Conference met to recommend future directions for aquatic
plant management in Florida. The Aquatic, Wetland and
Invasive Plant Information Retrieval System was established
at the University of Florida in 1979.
1980 The authority for use of
herbivorous fish for aquatic plant control was transferred
from DEP to the FWC in 1980. Also, the responsibility of
contracting herbicide and mechanical aquatic plant control
was transferred from the FWC to DEP.
1986 Governor declares a moratorium on herbicide
use in Lake Okeechobee and recommends using mechanical
harvesters in 1986. With an increase of approximately
40 acres a day of floating invasive vegetation, the
moratorium was lifted and more than $2 million and two
years are needed to regain maintenance control on the
lake.
1987 The first insects released in Florida as
biocontrol agents for waterlettuce (Pistia stratiotes) and hydrilla
occurred in 1987.
1990 Statewide maintenance control
of water hyacinth and water lettuce was achieved.
1999 Florida Forever Act passed
providing ~$25 million in additional funds for invasive
plant management efforts in Florida (80% for aquatic plant
control and 20% for upland plant control).
2008 The authority for
statewide invasive plant management was transferred from DEP
to FWC.
THE NON-NATIVE UPLAND PLANT INVADERS
1970s Scientists Julia Morton (Univ. of Miami) and
Dan Austin (Florida Atlantic Univ.) warn about the spread of
many ornamental and fruit species into natural areas in
scientific papers published in the mid-1970s. In 1977, the
Florida Legislature appropriated funds to the Florida
Division of Forestry for conducting research on melaleuca (Melaleuca
quinquenervia). Results of this project were presented
at the Melaleuca Symposium held in Ft. Myers in 1980.
1984 The Florida Exotic Pest Plant Council was
formed.
1986 A multi-agency management program was initiated
in 1986 by South Florida government agencies to remove
melaleuca seed sources from the East Everglades.
1988 The first Exotic Pest Plant
Council Symposium was held in November, 1988, at Miami.
1990 The Florida Exotic Pest Plant Council and the
South Florida Water Management District jointly convene a
Melaleuca Task Force that produced the first Melaleuca
Management Plan in 1990.
1992 The Florida Legislature appropriated $1 million
from DEP's Aquatic Plant Control Trust Fund to match funds
from the South Florida Water Management District to begin
melaleuca control operations in the Everglades Conservation
Areas and Lake Okeechobee. Melaleuca was listed as a Federal
Noxious Weed Species in 1992 and prohibited for sale or use
in Florida by DEP in 1993.
1997 The Florida Legislature mandated the DEP's
Bureau of Aquatic Plant Management (now the Bureau of
Invasive Plant Management) to implement a pilot project to
bring invasive exotic upland plant species within natural
areas under maintenance control. The Legislature allocated
$1 million. The first insect to control melaleuca was
released in 1997 by the USDA.
1998 DEP's Bureau of Invasive Plant Management
established an Upland Invasive Plant Management Section and
a statewide network of eleven regional workgroups to deal
with upland invasive species at a regional level.
1999 Florida Forever Act passed providing ~$25
million in additional funds for invasive plant management
efforts in Florida (80% for aquatic plant control and 20%
for upland plant control).
2008 The authority for
statewide invasive plant management was transferred from DEP
to FWC.
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