Volunteer removes a mature Euphorbia plant. |
Since January, CIR has been involved in a mainland
restoration project at Mission Canyon in Santa Barbara to help eradicate a
growing population of an extremely invasive plant, Carnation Spurge (Euphorbia
terracina). This plant was recently
discovered spreading through this residential area, down the road from the
Santa Barbara Botanic Gardens, and its proliferation has exploded with the late
winter rains. With grant funding from
the California Department of Food and Agriculture, the County of Santa Barbara
partnered with CIR to stop Carnation Spurge in its tracks and to keep it from spreading
even further.
CIR held four volunteer events at Mission Canyon with CIR
staff, 64 volunteers, and 4 CIR Board Members who helped to remove this
non-native plant species before the next season of rainfall. Much of the work was accomplished by basic
hand removal and solarization (placing black plastic over the plants depriving
them of light). This project could not
have been completed without the hard work and dedication of our volunteers! We thank the Santa Barbara Botanic Garden for
their support on this project by providing free admission at the end of the
volunteer event to those who participated to help control this invasive plant
population. We also thank the Mission
Canyon Association for all their support throughout this restoration project. The California Invasive Plant Council is
exploring possible future funding options to continue the efforts being made to
purge this Spurge.