Skip to content

Cariboo-Chilcotin receives invasive plant funding

The provincial government has provided $91,000 to the CRD and $22,000 to the Cariboo Chilcotin Coast Invasive Plant Committee

The provincial government has provided $91,000 to the Cariboo Regional District and $22,000 to the Cariboo Chilcotin Coast Invasive Plant Committee to control the spread of invasive plants.

The funding will be invested in activities, such as raising public awareness, surveying invasive plant populations and actively treating high-priority sites to control the spread of invasive plants.

Invasive plants are not native to a particular ecosystem and have the potential to displace long-established species. They can cause considerable economic and environmental damage.

Invasive plants may disrupt natural ecosystems, reduce biodiversity, increase soil erosion, alter soil chemistry and adversely affect commercial crops.

This is part of 28 grants being given province-wide to local governments, regional invasive species committees and the Invasive Species Council of British Columbia to assist their activities and support the objectives of the provincial Invasive Plant Program. This funding is in addition to the $534,000 already earmarked by the Ministry of Forests, Lands, and Natural Resource Operations for invasive plant control and management in 2013/14.

“Invasive plants are a real problem in the Cariboo-Chilcotin, and that’s why our government is taking action to stop their spread. This funding will give a boost to the Cariboo Regional District and the Cariboo Chilcotin Coast Invasive Plant Committee as they work to reduce the impact of invasive species,” says Cariboo-Chilcotin MLA Donna Barnett.

 

FAST bytes

• The Invasive Plant Program identifies sites where invasive plant species have been found and responds rapidly to contain and eradicate them before they become established and start spreading.

• Currently, some of the most intrusive plants in B.C. are orange and yellow (non-native) hawkweeds, garlic mustard, cord grasses and knotweed.

• Other targeted species include knapweed, giant hogweed, black henbane, blueweed, common tansy, tansy ragwort, hoary alyssum, field scabious, leafy spurge, purple loosestrife, yellow flag iris, Himalayan balsam and Scotch broom.

 

 



About the Author: Staff Writer

Read more