
Is reed canary grass an invasive species? The photo above suggests that it is. Thriving along the lake shore, this grass formed a dense monoculture that crowds out other plants, including native species. What once grew here? Reed canary grass has dominated this stretch of shoreline for so long that I can no longer remember what preceded it. Along the state park trail, it continues to spread through an ever-expanding network of rhizomes, steadily claiming new ground.

Smooth brome is a grass introduced in North America that spreads through propagation of rhizomes. This photograph is in my yard, yet it can be found all along the trail in wetland areas. It is commonly used for forage or erosion control, although it is doubtful a human planted it in the state park.

Orchard grass is another foreign species, doubtless introduced to produce forage or hay in Iowa’s pastures. This grass spread all along the state park trail. I don’t know that it is invasive. Just that it is part of the mix of species in the state park.
What does the grass know? Nothing framed the way humans would define “invasive.” From the plant’s perspective, success is success. A stand of reed canary grass that expands through a wetland is no different from a stand of oak trees slowly claiming an abandoned field. The difference lies in human values. The grasses in these photographs are appealing to we humans and that should be enough. “Invasive” is a human label, not a biological one. The grass itself is not making choices or pursuing a plan to dominate the shoreline. It is simply doing what its genetics and environment allow it to do: growing, reproducing, and spreading wherever conditions are favorable. I lean toward what is here is native.
There is substantial evidence these grasses were introduced by humans for forage, pasture, or hay production. Smooth brome (Bromus inermis) was introduced from Eurasia to North America in the late 1800s. Farmers valued it for drought tolerance, winter hardiness, and dependable hay yields. Orchard grass (Dactylis glomerata) is native to Europe, North Africa, and parts of Asia. It was brought to North America during the colonial period specifically as a pasture and hay grass, becoming one of the most common components of hay fields, often grown with alfalfa and clovers. Although some North American populations of reed canary grass (Phalaris arundinacea) may be native, the vigorous strains now widespread across the Midwest were widely planted for forage. It was considered valuable because it could produce forage on wet soils where many other crops struggled. To my point, all of these grasses were introduced by humans as part of agriculture.
The qualities that once made these grasses desirable hay crops are often the same qualities that now cause conservationists to label them invasive. A grass that grows quickly, spreads aggressively, tolerates poor conditions, and forms dense stands is a valuable forage plant—until it escapes a pasture or hay field.

Sumac is generally native to our area, yet it grows like an invasive. Unrelated to agriculture, this shrub spreads quickly along the state park trail through root suckers that form large colonies like the one in the photograph. Sumac stands out after first frost when it turns a brilliant red. A person needs only so much sumac to understand the species. It lives all along the trail blocking out other plants.

Multiflora rose presents a different kind of invasion. Unlike reed canary grass or smooth brome, which can blend into the landscape, multiflora rose makes its presence known with arching canes, sharp thorns, and dense growth which can transform open ground, woodland edges, and fence rows into nearly impenetrable thickets. I find its blooms all through the trail woodlands this week.
Native to East Asia, multiflora rose was intentionally introduced to North America. It was valued for its hardiness, adaptability, and ability to grow where other plants struggled. Birds readily consume its rose hips and disperse the seeds, helping the shrub spread far beyond where it was originally planted.
The question remains: what makes a plant invasive? Multiflora rose is not acting with purpose or intent. It is simply responding to opportunities in the environment, growing, reproducing, and spreading according to its biological nature. The shrub is not attempting to dominate the trail any more than an oak tree is attempting to dominate a forest.
When I walk on the state park trail, what presents itself in early June is a lush green landscape dotted with small white and pink flowers. A person could live in that world as if it were natural. It is not. The story of multiflora rose is as much about people as it is about plants. Humans moved it across continents and placed it in new environments. The shrub then did what successful species often do when conditions are favorable—it prospered.
These examples of plants found on the state park trail serve to say the human influence in our environment is visible if one knows how to look for it. Are these plants an invasive nuisance of just one more part of a changing landscape. So much depends upon the culture we bring to early morning walks in nature. That’s why I am inclined to say what is here is native.


















You must be logged in to post a comment.