Biocontrol of Australian Swampweed at Rye Harbour | Rye Harbour Nature Reserve

Biocontrol of Australian Swampweed at Rye Harbour

Wednesday, 10th August 2022

Biocontrol of Australian Swampweed at Rye Harbour
Aculus crassulae Credit Radmila Petanović

Australian Swampweed (Crassula helmsii) is an invasive non-native aquatic plant that dominates still and slow-flowing freshwater habitats across Britain.

This is Crassula helmsii, which can completely shade and dominate a wetland habitat.

It was first recorded at Rye Harbour Nature Reserve in 2002 at Castle Water, but has since spread through the reedbeds there, along Castle Farm ditches and even into some of the ponds and scrapes of Rye Harbour Farm. It has degraded our wetland for some of our rarest wildlife: Lesser Water Plantain, Spangled Button Beetle and breeding Lapwing, Redshank and Bittern. It grows across the damp drawdown zone and in the shallows and in the reedbeds, it shades out many of our wetland plants like Water Mint, Water Forget-me-not and Marsh Pennywort and it covers the bare damp ground loved by so many invertebrates and the birds feeding on them.

A ditch at Castle Water dominated by Crassula helmsii

But CABI is coming to the rescue - CABI is an international, inter-governmental organisation and has laboratories working on invasive species and so in 2010 a team started a search for some biocontrol agent - read the story here  The careful study has identified a small mite, Aculus crassulae to be the most suitable agent. Mite feeding causes the growing shoots of the terrestrial and emergent growth forms of Crassula helmsii to develop red galls or swellings, significantly reducing growth.

Aculus crassulae (Credit: Radmila Petanović)

Aculus crassulae on Crassula bud - the mites are the tiny projections off the bud

The exciting news is that this week staff from CABI released some of the tiny mites into a small area of Crassula at Castle Water. In there background there has been much discussion and agreement that this is the best way of improving these wetland habitats for wildlife and consents have been given by CABI, Natural England and Sussex Wildlife Trust.

The mite infected Crassula with red galls, ready for planting at Castle Water.

The CABI team planting out the Crassula with the mites.

This is the start of a long process including further introductions and monitoring that we hope will improve the health of our freshwater wetlands. In time this method can be used throughout the Rye Bay area where Crassula is locally abundant.

Henri Brocklebank – Director of Conservation at Sussex Wildlife Trust said – Crassula is a problem for so many wetland managers and the impact on our native wildlife is devastating. We very much look forward to seeing the impact of this mite over time and will be monitoring this closely. We will be sharing everything we learn from this experience with other wetland landowners.

This is one of our few Lesser Water Plantain plants just surviving being swamped by Crassula helmsii. Castle Water is the only site in East Sussex!




This post is also available on Sussex Wildlife Trust website

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