Opinion: Letter

Preserve the aboretum

As a University of Wisconsin-Madison student I have come to know, love and appreciate our environment. As a senior, I have grown to respect and love our ecological habitat that surrounds Madison. From Picnic Point out to the arboretum on the south shore of Lake Wingra, we are extremely lucky to be surrounded with such beauty. The arboretum is home to many unusual species of plants and grasses. It’s known for its immense amount of diversity and the many communities within the large prairie. The arboretum has represented the oldest and largest collection of species in the world for the past 60 years.

However, in the past 10 years, there have been some complications with different invasive species growing in the beautiful prairie. One specific species — reed canary grass — has been the most intrusive of the invaders. Growing in wetlands across the country, reed canary grass is a disruptive species that does not belong in our arboretum. The cause of this species is the extreme amounts of storm water and sewage runoff from the surrounding Madison area housing. This prairie is below the surrounding subdivisions, which results in a buildup of moist and wet areas that have not been able to dry out.

Numerous University of Wisconsin classes have documented drastic reductions of the native wetland plants and grasses as well as soil changes in the arboretum. This is means for much concern within our Madison ecological family and could potentially hurt our world-class arboretum in the long run. Arboretum facilitators have been working to improve the conditions of the prairie by implementing different types of pesticides that will kill off the reed canary grass.

In addition to this, each summer for the past few years they have been burning the prairie to control the spreading of the dangerous species. The result has been a resurgence of lush and rich vegetation that adds to the beauty of the arboretum. However, this past summer, because of the 52 inches of rain that Madison received, they were not able to burn the grass — it was too moist. This caused the reed canary grass to spread more than ever.

Today, we need to take a stand and go to the root of the problems — the surrounding neighborhoods. We need to make sure that they realize the harsh effects of this and what it can do if it continues. The community should want to help preserve this historic place and cherish the past 60 years. To say that our arboretum is the first restored in the world is unique, and we all need to take part in restoring it.

Anna Boettcher

Committee for a Constructive Tomorrow

[email protected]

Have a thought? We welcome your input, but please be polite and stay on topic wherever possible. Your comment may be deleted if it is inappropriately off topic or promotional or if it is unnecessarily rude or contains personal attacks. We may delete comments for other reasons as well. Just keep it simple and focus on your points as respectfully as possible.

We allow and encourage comments employing satire, wit and irony to make points. Do not flag comments just because you disagree. Flagged comments will be immunized from further flagging unless they stray far from the guidelines and do not add to the discussion. Before flagging a comment you think is offensive, consider your time might be better spent rebutting it than censoring it.

blog comments powered by Disqus

2 older comments

user-pic

This is the worst-written article I’ve read in quite some time. Ugh, was this the best you could find, BH? And it has nothing to do with students. I know: it belongs in a paper that THE COMMUNITY IN QUESTION WILL READ. Thanks for wasting our time.

user-pic

Idiotic dribble.Idiotic dribble.Idiotic dribble.Idiotic dribble.Idiotic dribble.Idiotic dribble.Idiotic dribble.

Invictus Maneo

Donate