The Missouri Invasive Plant Council (MoIP) is pleased to announce the winners of the 2023 Invasive Plant Action Awards. MoIP established the Invasive Plant Action Award program to recognize the outstanding work being done in Missouri to control invasive plant species, which threaten many aspects of Missouri’s natural habitats and economy.
The MoIP Invasive Plant Action Awards recognize exceptional effort and leadership in the field, and also serve as a way to demonstrate to the broader community how controlling the spread of invasive plants on Missouri farms, forests, woodlands, prairies, gardens, parks, neighborhoods, roadsides, and along waterways is attainable and very important land stewardship. Members of MoIP evaluate nominations and select winners annually. For more information about the Invasive Plant Action Awards program, visit the MoIP website, moinvasives.org.
The 2023 MoIP Award Winners …
Principia School of St. Louis is the winner in the Individual Organization category, awarded to an organization with outstanding contributions to the long-term management of invasive plant species and working to control the spread of invasive plants. Principia School is a longstanding independent school for infants through high school seniors. In 2014, Principia began incorporating “outdoor learning spaces.” In this process, they cleared bush honeysuckle and autumn olive, involving students in the removal and control of these invasive plants. In 2015, Principia cleared a 16-acre area of honeysuckle.
Since then, the school has mechanically cleared and chemically maintained a total of 48 acres, as well as carried out a multitude of other invasive plant control activities.
Principia has implemented the importance of learning about both native plants and invasive plant species in school curricula. The school involves its students in the control of invasives on campus, as well as teaches them about proper removal and control elsewhere. This initiative led to the development of programs at Principia, such as “The Impact Challenge,” wherein three high school students led a student team in invasive plant removal.
Dale Dufer of St. Louis is the winner in the Individual Citizen category, awarded to an individual citizen for outstanding work to fight the spread of invasive plants. Dale is the mastermind behind the bush honeysuckle awareness project called “Think About Tables,” which he started in 2014. Nearly ten years later, Think About Tables has led to bi-annual collaborations and development of school curricula for the removal of honeysuckle, as well as increased awareness of both this invasive plant and how essential native plants are. He even went as far as to put Bush Honeysuckle on “trial” on April 4, 2018, which launched an Invasive Species Mock Trial Curriculum in 2019.
Dale’s work to tackle an invasive plant sprouted from his skills, spirit, physical capacity, and his rich personal ecology of relationships-in-place. He’s modest about what he has achieved, enjoys seeding success for others, and focusing on fun while accomplishing serious results. As Dale likes to say, “Who knew all this could come from playing with sticks?’”
For more information about the 2023 Invasive Plant Action Award Winners, please visit https://moinvasives.org/2023/09/06/presenting-the-2023-invasive-plant-action-awards-winners/.
About MoIP
The Missouri Invasive Plant Council (MoIP) advocates for making early detection and control of known and potential invasive plants a statewide priority. In 2015, the Missouri Prairie Foundation’s Grow Native! program spearheaded this multi-agency, multi-industry networking and advocacy group to bolster statewide efforts to identify and control the invasive plants that severely impact several sectors of the Missouri economy and native biodiversity. The purpose of MoIP—working as a united, supportive front—is to review, discuss, and recommend educational and regulatory action related to managing known and potential non-native invasive plants. Representatives from the fields of conservation, agriculture, botanical science, ecological services, plant production, horticulture, landscape services and design, and forestry make up the council.