Oregon Strategist

Reinventing the Oregon Dream

ODA’s Beetles Take a Bite Out of Portland

August 14, 2015 by Tim Crawley

Galerucella BeetleThe Oregon Department of Agriculture’s (ODA) latest efforts to quell an invasive species has led to a massive beetle infestation in the Sellwood and Westmoreland neighborhood of Portland. The ODA first introduced the Galerucella beetle to Oregon in 1992 and released them into the Oaks Bottom wetland ten years ago to control the growth of Purple Loosestrife.

Residents of Sellwood and Westmoreland are now experiencing a drastic infestation of the beetle in their yards. The beetle has reportedly expanded its eating habits to residents’ crepe myrtle, roses, and tomatoes.

Instead of offering an apology to residents, the ODA decided to issue a press release blaming the infestation on a “perfect storm” of factors including hotter and drier weather conditions and favorable water conditions that have led to surge in the beetle’s population. Furthermore, the ODA, in the release, redirects the public attention to the dire need for this method of “biocontrol”, claiming the Purple Loosestrife, a wetland plant with a purple flower enjoyed by bees and butterflies alike and utilized against diarrhea and dysentery for its medicinal properties, is overly abundant and that the plant would cause $28 million in economic damage if it were to spread throughout Oregon.

Tinkering with the environment has long been a pastime of state and federal regulators. They have attempted to get the proper levels of all the ingredients so that it can cement in permanency its function as an environmental arbiter. And citizens are beginning to pay attention. Environmental organizations such as Friends of the Animals are speaking out against the U.S. Department of Fish and Wildlife’s (USDFW) killing of the barred owl to help promote the Spotted Owl’s habitat. The Center for Biological Diversity recently issued a press release against similar actions the USDFW was taking in the slaughter of Cormorants in the Columbia River Basin in an effort to encourage salmon and steelhead.

Few could argue that government has, at times, played an important role in reducing the human footprint. But like Mr. McGoo, state and federal regulators can also be, at times, the source of enormous disaster as we saw with the Environmental Protection Agency’s (EPA) toxic spill into the Animus River this past week that release lead, arsenic and cadmium into the flowing waters. The United States Department of Energy (USDOE) is in charge of the cleanup at the government-created Hanford Nuclear Reservation, wastes of which still gravely threatens Oregon and Washington.

A footprint is still a footprint. Environmental tinkering has an impact on all our lives. Our efforts to reduce this footprint might be a difficult pill to swallow for government and many organizations that base their efforts on reduction of invasive species for biodiversity. But reducing our footprint is simply a way of saying, we are not greater than nature but are a part of it and we accept its principles in the balance of our ecosystems, recognizing that our own tinkering can often be disruptive.

We should be focusing on how to reduce our footprint as a method for promoting environmental diversity rather than to reduce by method of death squad, the population of any over abundant plant or animal. Indeed, we would certainly not employ such methods in handling those immigrating to our state and towns, despite how many would view them as “invasive.”

For now, the ODA is literally in Portland residents’ backyards. There is no sure determination that the infestation is going to dissipate and not return next year when weather conditions could possibly be just as favorable to the little bugs.

Filed Under: Agriculture, Economy, Environment, Local, Portland, State Tagged With: Agriculture, animals, Animus, Animus River, arsenic, Beetle, Beetles, biocontrol, biodiversity, cadmium, Cleanup, Colorado, Cormorants, crepe myrtle, ecosystem, environment, environmental footprint, Environmental Protection Agency, footprint, Friends of the Animals, Galerucella, Galerucella Beetle, Government, Hanford, infestation, Invasive, Invasive Species, lead, Loosestrife, Nuclear Facility, Oaks Bottom, Oaks Bottom wetland, ODA, Oregon, Oregon Department of Agriculture, Oregon Washinton, Portland, Purple, Purple Loosestrife, rose, roses, Sellwood, Southeast, Southeast Portland, Spotted Owl, tomatoes, toxic spill, United States Department of Fish and Wildlife, USDFW, USDOE, Westmoreland, wetlands

Recent Posts

  • Floating Solar: Smoothing the Energy Cycle
  • FERC Denies Jordan Cove, For Now.
  • Prison Reform and Mandatory Minimum Sentencing
  • ODA’s Beetles Take a Bite Out of Portland
  • Chemical Forestry: A Clear Cut Challenge

Tags

Afghanistan animals BLM Bureau of Land Management Columbia River Congress corporations Crony Capitalism deficit economics Economy ecosystem Education eminent domain environment Europe Federal federal government Government House of Representatives Immigration Reform income inequality Iraq Jeff Merkley military Monsanto Oregon Partisan politics Peter DeFazio Portland Senate Senator Merkley Sequester Spending Syria tax taxes tax reform trade deficit trade surplus United States War Washington D.C. water wealth inequality

Copyright © 2025 · News Pro Theme on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in