April 11, 2014
Study finds that improved turf management techniques
help golf course ecosystems succeed.
Currently, there are more than 18,300 golf courses in
the US
covering over 2.7 million acres. The ecological impacts of golf courses are not
always straightforward with popular opinion suggesting that environmentally,
golf courses have a negative impact on ecosystems. Now,
researchers at the University
of Missouri have
determined that golf courses can offer a viable habitat for stream salamanders, and
enhanced management practices may be beneficial to ecosystems within golf
courses.
“If you look at the literature on golf courses,
historically they get a lot of bad publicity,” said Ray Semlitsch, Curators
Professor of Biological Sciences in the College of Arts
and Science at MU. “It’s always been thought that course managers not only
clear the land, but they add a lot of chemicals to the environment. In terms of
maintaining the turf of the golf course, managers use herbicides, insecticides,
pesticides and fertilizers. We went into the research study thinking these
things were going to be really toxic and really bad to the salamanders. What we
found was quite the opposite—golf courses can actually provide a wonderful
habitat for salamanders and other organisms where they can survive and thrive.”
The study was conducted on 10 golf courses in the
southern Appalachian region of western North
Carolina . All courses were within a 30-mile radius of
the Highlands Biological Station.
Sampling focused on both larvae and adult salamanders in streams that crossed
fairways within the golf courses. Water samples were also analyzed for
chemicals and adverse substances that might be detrimental to the salamanders
located on the courses.
“Surprisingly, we found no change or reduction in the
abundance or diversity of salamanders downstream, which is where we expected to
find chemical runoff from the upkeep and maintenance of the courses,” Semlitsch
said. “Golf courses have an environmental impact when they go in and clear an
area; however, because of improved management techniques, we’re seeing no signs
of chemical effects around these courses. It implies that the turf science
industry is doing a great job at utilizing fairway design techniques, plants
that reduce chemicals found in the soil, and other methods to ensure that
biodiversity succeeds on the course.”
Semlitsch and his research team, including graduate
students, Mark Mackey, Grant Connette and Bill Peterman, suggest that
salamander abundance on golf courses and related ecosystems may be enhanced
through simple management practices such as retaining woody debris, leaf
litter, and restoring the natural buffers between fairways and streams.
“We have this image of pristine and highly manicured
fairways such as the ones we see in Augusta , or
at Pebble Beach ,” Semlitsch said. “However, our
research suggests a more natural course that includes streams with leaf litter,
sticks and twigs that offer a natural habitat for different species is
preferred. Turf and golf course managers are taking note of these practices,
and it is making a real ecological difference.”
The study,
“Do golf courses reduce the ecological value of headwater streams for
salamanders in the southern Appalachian Mountains ?”
was published in the journal Landscape and Urban Planning, and was funded by a
Highlands Biological Station Fellowship and a United States Golf Association
and National Fish and Wildlife Foundation’s Wildlife Links granting program.
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