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Ecological Restoration and Invasives Control

Or, Why We're Cutting Down Trees

When passers by see Austin Parks Foundation volunteers cutting down trees, they are often alarmed. "We need the shade," they say, "And trees make the park feel natural". It's true, we tell them, but there are times when cutting down trees can be good ecologically.

Austin is facing an ecological crisis. Not only is wild land rapidly disappearing because of development, those areas protected as preserves and parks are being overgrown with non-native, invasive plants. At many creek-side areas throughout Austin, including many of our greenbelts including Barton Creek, Shoal Creek, Walnut Creek, and Bull Creek, non-native trees such as Ligustrum and Chinaberry have become the majority of the canopy. These fast-growing, adaptable plants are quite attractive, but they have many negative impacts. Here's a quick overview:

  • Invasives shade out understory plants, leaving bare dirt that erodes easily or is washed by periodic flooding along creeks.

  • Invasives grow quickly, out-competing native plants that feed and shelter wildlife.

  • Invasives produce astronomical quantities of seeds, allowing them to spread rapidly throughout the area.

When volunteers remove the invasive trees, native understory begins to rebound. For example, when Carl Brockman of Natural Texas donated his time and equipment a few years ago to clear an area of Shoal Creek Greenbelt, he revealed a grove of red buds, bald cypress, bois d’ arc, and other trees that had been completely hidden and smothered by invasive plants.

We also have found with recent efforts to remove concentrated thickets of ligustrum (one of the big 3 invasive species in central Texas), native grasses immediately begin sprouting and growing. A good example of this is the area along Barton Creek Greenbelt Trail accessible from Loop 360 Access.

Invasive trees and plants are really a form of biological pollution. While they may not seem as threatening as smog or a chemical spill, the effects are similiar.


A forestry mower at Pease Park. This very cool machine can bore through a tree, knock it down, and turn it into mulch. The machine is precise enough to allow the user to carefully select which trees to remove. The weight of the machine is very evenly distributed, with the same impact on the soil as a person pushing a wheelbarrow.

We can further restore our ecosystem by replanting some of the diverse species that once grew along Austin area creeks. The foundation gets continuing advice and approval from the Austin Parks and Recreation Dept (especially Rene Barrera, who manages the central and eastern preserves), the Ladybird Johnson Wildflower Center, and APF board members Glee Ingram and Jill Nokes, both native landscape designers.

Generally, we pull the trees out of the ground altogether or cut the trees and treat the stumps. If possible, we chip up all trees, limbs, etc on site. If we cannot do so, owing to access or space cosntraints, we create long rows of the trees and branches, called winrows, and continue to pakc, compact and cut those long piles to prevent soil erosion from runoff before the area resprouts in native plants.

Some of our current ecological restoration projects include:

Some of our completed ecologocial restoration projects include:

 

What You Can Do

For further information on invasive plant species issues, visit:

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