Make a Positive Environmental Impact for Invasive Species Awareness Week!

National Invasive Species Awareness Week runs from February 20th to 26th.

Each year, this week-long environmentalist initiative helps raise awareness about invasive species, the impacts they have on our ecosystems and environments, and ways scientists, governments, and citizens across the world can help prevent their spread.

Invasive species can be non-native plants, animals or insects that have been introduced to an environment, ultimately causing ecological damage to habitats and other species. They can also be native species that become harmful to their own environment due to human impacts on their food web or habitat. Locally, invasive species can be found in the mountains, lakes, rivers, forests and even residential communities of the Adirondacks. These invaders include aquatic animals like the Round Goby fish, insects such as Emerald Ash Borers and Hemlock Woolly Adelgid, and plants like Hydrilla.

Educating ourselves and creating actionable plans to help prevent and reduce the harm invasive species cause is an important part of being a good environmental steward. From cleaning, draining, and drying our boats to keeping our hiking boots and fishing gear clean between uses, or taking part in surveys to report invasive plants and insects in the wild, we can all be part of the solution.

Learn about invasive species across the Adirondacks, New York State, and the nation using the classroom-ready resources, activities, and Mountain Lake PBS reporting featured below. Then check out our list of local ecological & conservation organizations to see how you can get involved!

Jump to article sections:

Learn About Invasive Species

Invasive Species and Non-Standard Measurement

Grades K-2
Students learn about invasive species and the basic needs of plants in this STEM activity from Cyberchase. In the accompanying activity, they use non-standard measures and demonstrate their understanding of plants’ needs and invasive species.

Green Invaders! | Spot on Science

Grades 3-8
In this Spot on Science, Dr. Emily Rauschert, Assistant Professor of Plant Ecology at Cleveland State University, explains the qualities of invasive plants and how they are harmful to other plants, ecosystems, humans, and the economy. She also shares samples of bush honeysuckle, phragmites (common reed), English ivy, and giant hogweed!

Plant Ecologist and Civil Engineer | Great Job!

Grades 6-8
Visit the uniquely beautiful Cuyahoga Valley National Park and follow Plant Ecologist Chris Davis as he works to rid the park of invasive plant species, and bring back vibrant native species to the park. Afterwards, we tag along with Janet Popielski, a Civil Engineer at the park, as she shows us her work on a natural – and nearly invisible – wastewater treatment plant.

Warming Climate and Invasive Species

Grades 6-12
This video examines the relationship between climate change and the spread of insects and plant diseases, especially as it relates to the Menominee Indian Tribe’s forest, located in northeast Wisconsin. Menominee descendants explain that as typical weather patterns are being interrupted, changes occur that threaten the growth of the forest that the Menominee manage for both current and future generations. 

Biological Invaders

Grades 9-12
Modern transportation is a major threat to many of the world’s native species—invasive organisms stow away in ballast water on ships, cargo, and airplane wheel wells. This video segment from Evolution: Extinction! features Hawaiʻi’s efforts to prevent the brown tree snake from emigrating from Guam. Domingo Cravalho and Lester Kaichi of the Department of Agriculture are featured, and scientist David Burney comments.

Activities, Games & More

Invaders! | Plum Landing

Grades K-5
Players identify and remove invasive species from ecosystems around the world, in this interactive game from Plum Landing. But they must act quickly, before the invasive species use up all the resources!

NY iMapInvasives Tool

Grades 6-12
NY iMapInvasives is an online, collaborative, GIS-based database and mapping tool that serves as the official invasive species database for New York State. View a public map, create an account, and start reporting invasive species near you!

Building A Biodiversity Timeline

Grades 9-12
Identify and evaluate solutions for reducing human impacts on the environment and biodiversity in this interactive lesson and corresponding interdisciplinary research activity from WGBH. As you create your own timeline, you’ll gain a deeper understanding of the interconnectedness of humans and the environment and the impact human activities can have on biodiversity.

Lesson plan – Invent your own device to battle invasive species | PBS NewsHour

Grades 9-12
Stunning fish who were once kept as pets are destroying Florida’s coral reef ecosystem. In this PBS NewsHour lesson plan, students will learn how scientists are using a new invention, a lionfish zapping robot, to combat this harmful invasive species. Students will learn about the invention process and design their own invention to help deal with invasive species in their communities.

Local Stories: Impacts & Solutions to Invasive Species

Hemlock Woolly Adelgid Hunting Season | Mountain Lake Journal

Grades 6-12
Volunteers have been heading out into the woods during winter hunting for signs of an invasive insect, the Hemlock Woolly Adelgid – a tiny, destructive bug that has found its way to the Adirondacks. If it spreads, it could threaten millions of Hemlock trees throughout the Adirondack Park. The insect was first detected in the Adirondack Park in early July 2017.

Invasive Tree Beetle: Emerald Ash Borer | Mountain Lake Journal

Grades 6-12
The familiar traps we’ve seen hanging in trees across the North Country have finally captured a destructive insect that foresters fear could kill millions of Ash trees in Northern New York. Emerald Ash Borers have been found for the first time in the Adirondacks, turning up in traps in Franklin and St. Lawrence Counties.

Lake Invaders: Quagga Mussels and Asian Clams | Mountain Lake Journal

Grades 6-12
Meg Modley, who is an Aquatic Invasive Species Management Coordinator with the Lake Champlain Basin Program, and Brendan Quirion, who is the Program Director for the Adirondack Park Invasive Plant Program, join us to talk about efforts to combat the spread of invasive species in Lake Champlain and the Adirondack Park, including the Quagga Mussel and Asian Clam.

The Risk of Round Goby Reaching Lake Champlain | Mountain Lake Journal

Grades 6-12
Meg Modley, an Aquatic Invasive Species Management Coordinator with the Lake Champlain Basin Program tells us about the Rapid Response Plan that’s being put into action to try to prevent the Round Goby from reaching Lake Champlain via the Champlain Canal System, and why the fish could pose a serious threat to the lake’s ecosystem if it succeeds in getting a foothold in Lake Champlain in the coming months and years.

Invasive Species in Lake Champlain Region: Water Chestnut | Mountain Lake Journal

Grades 6-12
Watch an extended interview on U.S. Army Corps of Engineers projects to combat Water Chestnut, an invasive plant species, in the Lake Champlain region.

Local Ecological & Conservation Organizations

Lake Champlain Basin Program 

The Lake Champlain Basin Program coordinates and funds efforts that benefit the Lake Champlain Basin’s water quality, fisheries, wetlands, wildlife, recreation, and cultural resources, in partnership with government agencies, private organizations, local communities, and individuals.

The Nature Conservancy

The Nature Conservancy is a global environmental nonprofit working to create a world where people and nature can thrive. Through their work they focus on innovative solutions to climate change, protecting and restoring forest, and helping communities build resilience. The Nature Conservancy has a local chapter in New York State focused on initiatives across the Adirondacks, Central and Western New York, and the New York Metro area.

Adirondack Park Invasive Plant Program

Adirondack Park Invasive Plant Program (APIPP) is housed under the Adirondack Chapter of The Nature Conservancy. APIPP works with a dedicated network of over 30 cooperating organizations and hundreds of volunteers to minimize the impact of invasive species on the Adirondack region’s communities, lands, and waters. APIPP leads research, management, and community skill-building around invasive species affecting the Adirondack region.

The Adirondack Council

The Adirondack Council is focused on the protection of the Adirondack Park though research, education, advocacy and policy with a mission to ensure the ecological integrity and wild character of the Adirondack Park. To protect the Adirondacks, the Council uses the best science, the law, and an understanding of political decision making, to educate, inform and motivate the public and those who make public policy.


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