Lessons from a decade of lake management: effects of herbicides on Eurasian watermilfoil and native plant communities

Abstract Eurasian watermilfoil (Myriophyllum spicatum) is a non‐native and invasive aquatic macrophyte with a broad North American distribution. It can have significant negative effects on invaded waterbodies, including decreased native macrophyte diversity, formation of recreational nuisances, and...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Ellen Ruth Kujawa, Paul Frater, Alison Mikulyuk, Martha Barton, Michelle E. Nault, Scott Van Egeren, Jennifer Hauxwell
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2017-04-01
Series:Ecosphere
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/ecs2.1718
id doaj-9440afe5bf94497596b8f54b2214968d
record_format Article
spelling doaj-9440afe5bf94497596b8f54b2214968d2020-11-25T02:19:13ZengWileyEcosphere2150-89252017-04-0184n/an/a10.1002/ecs2.1718Lessons from a decade of lake management: effects of herbicides on Eurasian watermilfoil and native plant communitiesEllen Ruth Kujawa0Paul Frater1Alison Mikulyuk2Martha Barton3Michelle E. Nault4Scott Van Egeren5Jennifer Hauxwell6Bureau of Science Services Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources Madison Wisconsin 53716 USABureau of Science Services Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources Madison Wisconsin 53716 USABureau of Science Services Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources Madison Wisconsin 53716 USABureau of Science Services Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources Madison Wisconsin 53716 USABureau of Science Services Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources Madison Wisconsin 53716 USABureau of Science Services Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources Madison Wisconsin 53716 USABureau of Science Services Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources Madison Wisconsin 53716 USAAbstract Eurasian watermilfoil (Myriophyllum spicatum) is a non‐native and invasive aquatic macrophyte with a broad North American distribution. It can have significant negative effects on invaded waterbodies, including decreased native macrophyte diversity, formation of recreational nuisances, and lowered lakefront property values. Previous research suggests that M. spicatum decreases in response to herbicide treatment, but most studies are spatially and temporally limited, usually focusing on a single waterbody for a single year. The long‐term effects of herbicides remain relatively unknown. Here, we share the results of an 11‐yr observational study of aquatic macrophyte diversity, dynamics, and response to herbicide treatment on 28 Wisconsin lakes (15 of which were adaptively managed with herbicide for M. spicatum and 13 of which acted as unmanaged reference lakes). We found that overall, adaptive management decreases M. spicatum abundance over time, but that the efficacy of individual herbicide treatments can vary. We also found that lakes with relatively new M. spicatum populations (discovered within the last decade) treated smaller areas with lower frequency than lakes with established populations, and were able to maintain lower M. spicatum abundance. This suggests that using adaptive, science‐based aquatic plant management strategies, including early detection and response, may increase invasive species management success. Finally, we show that the effect of herbicide treatment on native macrophytes is variable and can be significant. Overall, our results suggest that while herbicide treatment can be an effective adaptive management tool, particularly in lakes with relatively recent M. spicatum invasions, the specific effects of individual treatments can be unpredictable. This study allows lake stakeholders to better understand the efficacy of herbicide treatment, in addition to the possible non‐target effects on native macrophyte species.https://doi.org/10.1002/ecs2.1718adaptive managementaquatic macrophytesearly detection and responseinvasionlong‐term observational research
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ellen Ruth Kujawa
Paul Frater
Alison Mikulyuk
Martha Barton
Michelle E. Nault
Scott Van Egeren
Jennifer Hauxwell
spellingShingle Ellen Ruth Kujawa
Paul Frater
Alison Mikulyuk
Martha Barton
Michelle E. Nault
Scott Van Egeren
Jennifer Hauxwell
Lessons from a decade of lake management: effects of herbicides on Eurasian watermilfoil and native plant communities
Ecosphere
adaptive management
aquatic macrophytes
early detection and response
invasion
long‐term observational research
author_facet Ellen Ruth Kujawa
Paul Frater
Alison Mikulyuk
Martha Barton
Michelle E. Nault
Scott Van Egeren
Jennifer Hauxwell
author_sort Ellen Ruth Kujawa
title Lessons from a decade of lake management: effects of herbicides on Eurasian watermilfoil and native plant communities
title_short Lessons from a decade of lake management: effects of herbicides on Eurasian watermilfoil and native plant communities
title_full Lessons from a decade of lake management: effects of herbicides on Eurasian watermilfoil and native plant communities
title_fullStr Lessons from a decade of lake management: effects of herbicides on Eurasian watermilfoil and native plant communities
title_full_unstemmed Lessons from a decade of lake management: effects of herbicides on Eurasian watermilfoil and native plant communities
title_sort lessons from a decade of lake management: effects of herbicides on eurasian watermilfoil and native plant communities
publisher Wiley
series Ecosphere
issn 2150-8925
publishDate 2017-04-01
description Abstract Eurasian watermilfoil (Myriophyllum spicatum) is a non‐native and invasive aquatic macrophyte with a broad North American distribution. It can have significant negative effects on invaded waterbodies, including decreased native macrophyte diversity, formation of recreational nuisances, and lowered lakefront property values. Previous research suggests that M. spicatum decreases in response to herbicide treatment, but most studies are spatially and temporally limited, usually focusing on a single waterbody for a single year. The long‐term effects of herbicides remain relatively unknown. Here, we share the results of an 11‐yr observational study of aquatic macrophyte diversity, dynamics, and response to herbicide treatment on 28 Wisconsin lakes (15 of which were adaptively managed with herbicide for M. spicatum and 13 of which acted as unmanaged reference lakes). We found that overall, adaptive management decreases M. spicatum abundance over time, but that the efficacy of individual herbicide treatments can vary. We also found that lakes with relatively new M. spicatum populations (discovered within the last decade) treated smaller areas with lower frequency than lakes with established populations, and were able to maintain lower M. spicatum abundance. This suggests that using adaptive, science‐based aquatic plant management strategies, including early detection and response, may increase invasive species management success. Finally, we show that the effect of herbicide treatment on native macrophytes is variable and can be significant. Overall, our results suggest that while herbicide treatment can be an effective adaptive management tool, particularly in lakes with relatively recent M. spicatum invasions, the specific effects of individual treatments can be unpredictable. This study allows lake stakeholders to better understand the efficacy of herbicide treatment, in addition to the possible non‐target effects on native macrophyte species.
topic adaptive management
aquatic macrophytes
early detection and response
invasion
long‐term observational research
url https://doi.org/10.1002/ecs2.1718
work_keys_str_mv AT ellenruthkujawa lessonsfromadecadeoflakemanagementeffectsofherbicidesoneurasianwatermilfoilandnativeplantcommunities
AT paulfrater lessonsfromadecadeoflakemanagementeffectsofherbicidesoneurasianwatermilfoilandnativeplantcommunities
AT alisonmikulyuk lessonsfromadecadeoflakemanagementeffectsofherbicidesoneurasianwatermilfoilandnativeplantcommunities
AT marthabarton lessonsfromadecadeoflakemanagementeffectsofherbicidesoneurasianwatermilfoilandnativeplantcommunities
AT michelleenault lessonsfromadecadeoflakemanagementeffectsofherbicidesoneurasianwatermilfoilandnativeplantcommunities
AT scottvanegeren lessonsfromadecadeoflakemanagementeffectsofherbicidesoneurasianwatermilfoilandnativeplantcommunities
AT jenniferhauxwell lessonsfromadecadeoflakemanagementeffectsofherbicidesoneurasianwatermilfoilandnativeplantcommunities
_version_ 1724877482536992768