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The Thanksgiving Feast

This year you can have a delicious Thanksgiving and help the environment too by focusing your dinner on invasive and exotic species.

Photo by South Florida Water Management

william schlesinger
President Emeritus, Biogeochemist

With the arrival of the pilgrims in 1620, the invasion of exotic species in North America began in earnest—annual grasses in the west, meadow weeds in the east, starlings and house sparrows coast to coast.  The onslaught continues today with forests pests and pathogens, zebra mussels, and nutria.  Many of these species have no natural predators or pathogens of their own, so they expand without limit in their new habitat.

This year you can have a delicious Thanksgiving and help the environment too by focusing your dinner on invasive and exotic species.  The menu, which will vary regionally, might look like this:

 

Hors d’oeuvres

Plump Zebra Mussels on the half shell

Appetizer

Asian Jumping Carp stuffed with cheese-crusted Green Crab

Main Course

Roasted Rock Pigeon, wrapped with Everglades Python bacon

Salad

Spring-harvested Japanese Knotweed shoots

Dessert

Kudzu-berry pie

Bon Appetite!

 

william schlesinger
President Emeritus, Biogeochemist

William Schlesinger is active in communicating science to policy makers and media. He has testified about environmental issues in Congress and in state houses, and has been featured in media including NOVA, the Weather Channel, Discover, National Geographic, and the New York Times.

He discusses a range of environmental issues in his weekly blog, Translational Ecology.

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