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Symbiosis- invasive species

October 13, 2021 Cindee Klement
Hairy Crabweed Fatoua villosa is the only invasive species I have discovered in Symbiosis.

Hairy Crabweed Fatoua villosa is the only invasive species I have discovered in Symbiosis.

It gives me confidence in my landscape philosopies when I read research publications that support my observations of “Symbiosis.”

In July, Houston received an extraordinary amount of rain. That is when I discovered an invasion of Fatoua villos. Aware of the harmful effects of invasive species such as kudzu, I panicked. I went into industrial irradiacation gear. After two days of pulling the hairy-plant-beast from the beds, I noticed many of the native plants were suffering from too much water. I also noticed the native plants in the beds that I had not pulled we're not struggling. I stopped the pulling of the species. That is when I adopted a weed or invasive species management philosophy. Now I carefully observe how each species is impacting the naticve plants, the wildlife and the visual impact of the sculpture. Below is an article from Science Daily that supports my observation.

“The paper's implications suggest that faced with declining fisheries, threatened reef ecosystems, and changing climatic and oceanic conditions, the value of ecosystem services provided by some invasive species, e.g., mangroves, may outweigh their negative effects. Therefore, the decision-making process involved in managing some invasive species warrants more careful consideration of both costs and benefits provided to the ecosystem.

"In a static world, invasive species are bad because they disrupt ecosystems," Granek said. "But we're living in a world where the environment is changing. The climate is changing. The oceans are changing. That changes the calculus of how bad some invasive species are to the habitats they've been introduced into."

In Water, contemporary at , regenerative art, cindee klement, houston artist, impact of pesticides, texaswomanartist, site-specific art, environmental art, houston art, lawndale art center, energy, coastal plains habitats, reimagine sculpture gardn, texas artist, land art, bio art, installation art, native species, sculpture month houston, regenertative land art, instllation art, art proposal, art activism, native plants, conservation artist , texas art, microorganisms Tags fatoua villosa, invasive species
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