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Beneficial "Invasive" Species?

Posted on 5/12/25 at 3:37 pm
Posted by SPAGHETTI PLATE
Montgomery, Texas
Member since Jan 2025
191 posts
Posted on 5/12/25 at 3:37 pm
We all know about zebra mussels invading US lakes, or snakeheads and pythons messing up ecosystems in Florida etc etc

I'm just curious if there is anything on the flip side of this. A non native species that benefits an area.

This can apply to plants or animals.
Posted by AlxTgr
Kyre Banorg
Member since Oct 2003
84368 posts
Posted on 5/12/25 at 3:44 pm to
Honey bee.
Posted by bbvdd
Memphis, TN
Member since Jun 2009
26999 posts
Posted on 5/12/25 at 3:51 pm to
It sure as shite is not kudzu
Posted by AlxTgr
Kyre Banorg
Member since Oct 2003
84368 posts
Posted on 5/12/25 at 3:52 pm to
How has that not jumped the Ms. River?
Posted by bbvdd
Memphis, TN
Member since Jun 2009
26999 posts
Posted on 5/12/25 at 3:56 pm to
I don't know but I hate it with a passion.

I have it in 5 places at my place. Last year I started spraying it with crossbow (mix of tryclopyr and 2,4D). I've killed a bunch of stuff that I did really want to but I had to to kill the kudzu.

I think it will take my 5-7yrs to actually kill it completely.

ETA: I sprayed it 4-5 times last year. Have sprayed 2 areas once so far this year.
This post was edited on 5/12/25 at 3:58 pm
Posted by Bert Macklin FBI
Quantico
Member since May 2013
11056 posts
Posted on 5/12/25 at 3:59 pm to
quote:

Beneficial "Invasive" Species?


Great Britain? They invaded many part sof the world and while not everything was beneficial, its hard to argue they didn't modernize a large portion of the planet.
Posted by Bert Macklin FBI
Quantico
Member since May 2013
11056 posts
Posted on 5/12/25 at 4:01 pm to
quote:


It sure as shite is not kudzu


I have that behind my shed and it literally finds cracks in the wall and grows INSIDE the shed. Annoying arse vine.
Posted by rmc
Truth or Consequences
Member since Sep 2004
27163 posts
Posted on 5/12/25 at 4:05 pm to
I know hogs are bad. Very bad. But I do enjoy shooting them and eating them.
Posted by TigerDeacon
West Monroe, LA
Member since Sep 2003
29768 posts
Posted on 5/12/25 at 4:07 pm to
quote:

How has that not jumped the Ms. River?


Kudzu?

It's on both sides of the river.
Posted by AlxTgr
Kyre Banorg
Member since Oct 2003
84368 posts
Posted on 5/12/25 at 4:11 pm to
quote:

It's on both sides of the river.
Had no idea. Every time I cross at Vidalia it's none, none, none, bam.
Posted by Ol boy
Member since Oct 2018
3609 posts
Posted on 5/12/25 at 4:29 pm to
Crawfish were not native to China but were brought over in the early 1900s they then became cheap imports here in the USA.
Ohh wait you said beneficial!!
Posted by luvdoc
"Please Ignore Our Yelp Reviews"
Member since May 2005
1038 posts
Posted on 5/12/25 at 5:09 pm to
Apples
Posted by jrobic4
Baton Rouge
Member since Aug 2011
10451 posts
Posted on 5/12/25 at 5:59 pm to
While not invasive, the salmon in Lake Michigan and other Great Lakes are not native. They were brought in to kill alewives, which were destroying the Lake.

They created a multi-million $$$ sports fishing industry as well
Posted by turkish
Member since Aug 2016
2112 posts
Posted on 5/12/25 at 6:00 pm to
You’re right, but it has provided some benefits. The erosion it’s mitigated along the MS River bluff is substantial.
Posted by Recovered
Member since May 2016
641 posts
Posted on 5/12/25 at 6:15 pm to
Honey Suckle
Posted by White Bear
Yonnygo
Member since Jul 2014
16350 posts
Posted on 5/12/25 at 6:40 pm to
Add transline in the rotation.
Posted by No Colors
Sandbar
Member since Sep 2010
12110 posts
Posted on 5/12/25 at 7:06 pm to
quote:

While not invasive, the salmon in Lake Michigan and other Great Lakes are not native.


When Lewis and Clark explored out West, the rivers and lakes were basically void of fish. They described them as sterile. A few suckers is all they found to eat.

There were a few native brook and cutthroat trout in super high elevations around Yellowstone.

The brown and rainbow trout that dominate out West now were all brought from Europe.

And the other answer is obviously: Pheasants. Brought from China about the same time as the trout came from Europe.

Two of the wild game species most emblematic of the American West are transplants.
Posted by AlxTgr
Kyre Banorg
Member since Oct 2003
84368 posts
Posted on 5/12/25 at 7:06 pm to
quote:

Honey Suckle
I have seen some anti honey suckle people out there, but didn't pay attention long enough to find out why.
Posted by WarCamEagle88
NC
Member since Feb 2018
244 posts
Posted on 5/12/25 at 7:16 pm to
I learned recently that wild turkeys are present in 49 states, but are only “native” to 37 states. I guess that’d count as invasive.
Posted by ecb
Member since Jul 2010
9734 posts
Posted on 5/12/25 at 7:37 pm to
Pheasants, horses, cattle? Goats, sheep?
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