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A summer in the woods

Thursday, August 28, 2008
Myrna Anderson

"It looks more silvery as the wind blows,鈥 he said. 鈥淭he silvery side of the leaf flips over in the breeze, and then it shimmers.鈥

17c起草社区 College professor of biology David Dornbos is giving his aesthetic take on the shrub thriving on both sides of the highway en route to Pierce Cedar Creek Institute, near Hastings. The shrub he is describing is the autumn olive, an invasive species that Dornbos and 17c起草社区 sophomore Rachel Hesselink have learned is pretty good at taking over the landscape.

Summer researcher

Hesselink, 20, spent her summer researching the autumn olive at the institute, a natural area of 661 acres of wetlands, forests, marshes, streams, lakes and prairies crisscrossed by seven miles of trails and anchored by a spacious, modern visitor鈥檚 center.

The species is thriving at the institute too, and what her research, and that of Dornbos has shown, is that autumn olive鈥攁 woody shrub introduced to America from Asia in the 1830s as an ornamental plant鈥攁ggressively colonizes both meadows and the forest understory. 鈥淭his academic project is to figure out why it鈥檚 so competitive is these different areas,鈥 said Hesselink. 鈥淚f we figure that out, we can figure out what areas are risk areas.鈥

Gobbling CO2

Key to the autumn olive鈥檚 aggression is the rate at which it does photosynthesis, the conversion of light energy and carbon dioxide (CO2) into sugar. Dornbos and Hesselink are measuring the rate of photosynthesis of the invasive species versus its woody shrub competitors.

鈥淚n the meadow,鈥 he said, 鈥渢here are two or three plants that can do photosynthesis as fast as autumn olive, but there鈥檚 nothing faster.鈥

Reading the trees

The real story, however, is the forest understory, where Dornbos took readings from leaves on a variety of shrubs, using a device that measures CO2 going into a leaf and water coming out: Beech; 27. White Ash; 29, 30. Red Maple; 31, 26. Oak; 37, 34. Autumn Olive; 55, 52, 56, 57. (Hesselink also grinds up leaves from the plant and measures the result for chlorophyll.)

鈥淓verybody in land conservancy, they know about autumn olive in the meadows鈥,鈥 said Dornbos. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 think that鈥檚 the real problem. I think the problem is in the understory of the native forest.鈥 He gestured toward the more heavily forested area nearby: 鈥淚n two years time, this went from 40 percent un-infested to 20 percent un-infested,鈥 he said.

It isn鈥檛 possible to eradicate autumn olive altogether, said Dornbos. 鈥淚t鈥檚 like zebra mussels 鈥; you鈥檙e can鈥檛 get them out of Lake Michigan.鈥 The solution, he said, is to prevent the invader from getting started.

Researching through URGE

Hesselink, who was given a $3,000 stipend from Undergraduate Research Grants for the Environment (URGE), a program of the institute, has handled the majority of the research on the autumn olive; her work will be published in an academic journal.

She spent the summer living in Hyla House, a farmhouse belonging to the institute with student researchers from Aquinas College, Grand Valley State University, Western Michigan University, Valparaiso University and Albion College. The students work on a range of biology projects. 鈥淲e鈥檙e hoping to raise the next generation of scientists,鈥 said Matt Dykstra, the education director for the institute.

When she鈥檚 not stalking invasive species, Hesselink is fishing and hiking with her colleagues. 鈥淚 went frog catching with the frog catchers,鈥 she said. 鈥淭hey have to go out at night.鈥 She enjoys the rural setting and pastimes, she added.

Hands-on learning

鈥淚t鈥檚 not an opportunity for everyone,鈥 said Dornbos, who has worked with two other students over the previous summers, researching autumn olive. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a little remote. It can be a little scary. I don鈥檛 know that everyone would gravitate toward it.鈥  He does think the URGE program is an effective teacher: 鈥淵ou can鈥檛 learn biology unless you do it. It鈥檚 not a bunch of facts,鈥 he said. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 what any summer research program is all about.鈥