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Invasive zombie plant takes hold in St. John River

When aquatic botanist Meghann Bruce found an invasive species nicknamed zombie plant in the St. John River in 2015, she only found it in one spot. 

She actually stumbled upon Eurasian watermilfoil while doing a botanical survey of the river for another project. 

As part of that study, she explored 171 sites between the Mactaquac Dam and the Princess Margaret Bridge in Fredericton. 

She returned to the same sites in 2018 and discovered the invasive plant in more than 60 of the locations. 

Meghann Bruce first discovered Eurasian watermilfoil in 2015, while doing a botanical survey in the St. John River for another project. (Shane Fowler/CBC)

Bruce hasn’t checked all of those sites since then, but she’s regularly on the water in those areas and suspects the Eurasian watermilfoil has spread even further. 

“It’s not that surprising because it is an invasive species and one thing that they tend to have is a broad environmental tolerance, and so they tend to grow really well in new areas that they’re introduced to.”

WATCH | Hunting zombie plants on the St. John River:

Invasive Eurasian watermilfoil spreads in N.B. waterways

Aquatic botanist Meghann Bruce has been keeping an eye on the spread of the invasive Eurasian watermilfoil, which has earned the nickname zombie plant, since first discovering it in the St. John River in 2015.

As with many invasive species, now that Eurasian watermilfoil has established itself in the river system, “eradication is not feasible,” said Bruce. 

One local group, however, isn’t willing to go down without a fight. 

The Jemseg Grand Lake Watershed Association launched a pilot project last year to try to keep the plant at bay. The goal is to slow the spread and reduce the number of plants in some heavily affected areas. 

Last fall, the team divided an affected area into three zones, explained project co-ordinator Juan Sanchez. 

In one, they used scissors to snip off the plants at ground level. In another, they pulled up the plants by hand — roots and all. And the third area was left alone as a control site. 

A dark-haired man smiles at the camera.
Juan Sanchez is the project co-ordinator of the Jemseg Grand Lake Watershed Association’s Eurasian watermilfoil pilot project. (Submitted by Juan Sanchez)

In the first two areas, they removed all of the zombie plants and anything that looked like them, including native watermilfoils, just to be sure they got it all. 

Sanchez returned to the area this year and counted every single plant in all three sites.

Where they snipped the intruders with scissors, he found 30-40 plants — roughly the same number found last year — but where they pulled the plants by the roots, there were only five to 10. 

As for the control area, said Sanchez, “Well, there was an accident with the control.”

Last summer saw unusually high water levels, he said. With levels significantly lower this summer, “the control plot didn’t have the necessary depth for the plant to grow it back again.”

A fine-leafed plant in the palm of a person's hand.
A photo showing the four whorls around a stem that distinguish the Eurasian watermilfoil. When floating in the water, Bruce said the plant looks like a bottle brush. (Shane Fowler/CBC)

The Eurasian watermilfoil earned the nickname of zombie plant by being impossibly hard to kill. In fact, about the only condition it can’t survive is lack of water, so this year’s lower water levels prevented it from growing as it did last year in the control plot.  

John Welsman, a board member of the Jemseg Grand Lake Watershed Association, said the goal of the pilot project was to learn about the plant and to try to manage its spread. 

He said some property owners have tried their own methods to get rid of it. 

Side by side photos of a body of water. One on left shows clear water, while the one on the right has a thick brown mat of vegetation on the surface.
The photo on the left was taken in 2016 before Eurasian watermilfoil was discovered in this particular cove. The same cove is shown two years later in the photo on the right. (Submitted by Meghann Bruce)

“But they may not know that every one of these fragments that they may leave behind can become its own new plant. So … we’re basically advising people not to try removing this themselves.” 

Sanchez said they may continue the project and set up more test sites in different areas of the lake to see how successful the hand-removal method is “across different years.”

‘Dense mats of floating vegetation’

The New Brunswick Invasive Species Council describes the Eurasian watermilfoil as a species native to Europe, Asia, and Northern Africa, “that was introduced to North America in the 19th-century via ballast water or the aquarium trade.”

It’s become “widely distributed” across North America, which has resulted in “severe impacts on aquatic ecosystems … including rapidly establishing and forming dense mats of floating vegetation that shade out native aquatic plants and reduce oxygen in the water, impacting fish and other species.”

Brownish-green clumps of plants on a water's surface.
Eurasian watermilfoil are long aquatic plants that can form dense mats on the water’s surface. (Shane Fowler/CBC)

Even a small broken-off piece can root and grow a whole new plant, said Bruce. That’s why it’s important to clean off boats and other equipment when moving from one body of water to another. 

The species particularly likes the conditions in lakes and ponds, where water often moves more slowly. 

“We’ve got a lot of beautiful lakes in New Brunswick that are valued recreationally. And if this was to get into those — those are the types of habitat where it could really expand and proliferate,” she said.

“In the river, we do find that it’s a little bit more picky about what areas it’s colonizing. It does like the back channels and the inner island habitats and coves with slower moving waters.”  

But it’s even growing in the often fast-moving water near the Mactaquac Dam, closer than Bruce would have expected.

Woman leans over the side of a boat and reaches for floatinig plants.
Bruce collects samples of Eurasian watermilfoil to test for toxicity of the cyanobacteria growing on it. (Shane Fowler/CBC)

Where it has established itself, it’s really taken hold, she said.

“It’s getting to the point where in some areas, it’s totally displaced native species. Or in some spots, they’re still growing, just not as abundant.”

Bruce, who teaches at the University of New Brunswick, used to take students to a particular cove on the St. John River, above Fredericton, to teach them about plant identification. The cove included a variety of plant species, including two that occur in very few locations in the province. 

Grey-haired man smiles at the camera.
John Welsman, a board member of the Jemseg Grand Lake Watershed Association, says the goal of the pilot project is to learn about the Eurasian watermilfoil and try to manage its spread. (Submitted by John Welsman)

“It was excellent because of the diversity in this area. And it is a really beautiful spot. And now when I go back there, it’s all Eurasian watermilfoil and I can no longer find those two rare plants.”

Bruce said the plants don’t pose any real danger to people, it’s “mainly an inconvenience.”

When the plants are thick enough, they interfere with recreational activities like fishing, swimming and boating. 

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