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Introduction of European Species upon North American dirt:

Posted on 12/14/16 at 8:55 am
Posted by Mister Tee
On the Lake
Member since Jun 2014
2761 posts
Posted on 12/14/16 at 8:55 am
LINK /

Pigs, Lambs and Cattle.

Ivy, Honeysuckle and English peas.

We have loads of thanks to European people(s) for these types of things.

Very much glad to be American...but do any of you guys remember where you "come from"?

My grandmother always tries to remind me of these things so just wondering.
Posted by Mister Tee
On the Lake
Member since Jun 2014
2761 posts
Posted on 12/14/16 at 8:58 am to
Pretty much thought it was all American food.
Posted by GnashRebel
Member since May 2015
8634 posts
Posted on 12/14/16 at 11:13 am to
Starlings
Posted by Kentucker
Cincinnati, KY
Member since Apr 2013
19356 posts
Posted on 12/14/16 at 11:59 am to
English Sparrows.

quote:

A homesick Englishman by the name of Nicholas Pike brought with him 50 House Sparrows from England and released them in Brooklyn, New York. Those 50 sparrows quickly adapted to the American lifestyle, driving out birds that had been native here.


Starlings.

quote:

In the early 1890's, the Acclimation Society of North America released 50 pairs of Starlings into New York's Central Park as part of a project to introduce every bird ever mentioned in a Shakespeare play. Only 50 years later their populations had spread across the continent, competing for nesting sites with our native birds.



Those 50 pairs have become 250 million. They and English Sparrows are causing untold damage to breeding sites for native birds.

LINK
Posted by MoarKilometers
Member since Apr 2015
19885 posts
Posted on 12/14/16 at 3:36 pm to
Kudzu, burmese pythons, zebra mussels, africanized bees... frick non native species and arse clowns who proliferated them.
Posted by Ridgewalker
Member since Aug 2012
3918 posts
Posted on 12/14/16 at 3:44 pm to
I hate honeysuckle with a passion. The stuff is taking over our forests.

Add Japanese Carp and beetles to the list while you are at it.
Posted by Chazzy McRamzee
Member since Jun 2014
2681 posts
Posted on 12/14/16 at 3:59 pm to
quote:

2009 Kudzu bug from Asia first documented in the southeastern US.


These critters came on a jet to the ATL.

When I was living in Georgia a few years ago there was random day where there were thousands of these things swarming everywhere. They were on doors, cars, everything.

And they smell bad too.

Posted by Chazzy McRamzee
Member since Jun 2014
2681 posts
Posted on 12/14/16 at 3:59 pm to
(no message)
This post was edited on 12/14/16 at 4:09 pm
Posted by JustGetItRight
Member since Jan 2012
15846 posts
Posted on 12/14/16 at 4:11 pm to
They aren't always intentional introductions. Many are accidental byproducts of international travel & trade.

Fire ants, for example, didn't exist in the United States until about 100 years ago when they appeared around the port of Mobile. They didn't exist in Australia until early this century.

Posted by Sleeping Tiger
Member since Sep 2013
8488 posts
Posted on 12/14/16 at 4:16 pm to
I'm pretty sure the Spanish brought horses here.

Changed a lot of things.

Indian tribes that were more culturally and physically advanced were eventually overtaken by much weaker physically and less cultural tribes who mastered horse riding.
This post was edited on 12/14/16 at 4:16 pm
Posted by Kentucker
Cincinnati, KY
Member since Apr 2013
19356 posts
Posted on 12/14/16 at 4:32 pm to
Jumping Asian carp in the Mississippi River.

Posted by Pavoloco83
Acworth Ga. too many damn dawgs
Member since Nov 2013
15347 posts
Posted on 12/15/16 at 8:17 pm to
Melanin enhanced people were forceably introduced to North America. does that count? just sayin...
Posted by DragginFly
Under the Mountain;By the Lake
Member since Oct 2014
3673 posts
Posted on 12/16/16 at 11:00 am to
quote:

frick non native species and arse clowns who proliferated them.


As revenge, we gifted Europe with Canada Geese.

LINK

Posted by AggieDub14
Oil Baron
Member since Oct 2015
14631 posts
Posted on 12/16/16 at 12:46 pm to
I believe Horses could be added to that list as well. Pretty sure there are no native horses to America.
Posted by Kentucker
Cincinnati, KY
Member since Apr 2013
19356 posts
Posted on 12/16/16 at 5:08 pm to
They first evolved in North America, as did camels, but died out. They were reintroduced by Europeans.
Posted by memphisplaya
Member since Jan 2009
86846 posts
Posted on 12/16/16 at 6:02 pm to
Lion fish.

Taste great, but they can whip out food supply with a quickness. People just had to have them in the pet trade.
Posted by Kentucker
Cincinnati, KY
Member since Apr 2013
19356 posts
Posted on 12/16/16 at 7:39 pm to
They have spread all over the Atlantic, displacing many other species of fish. They're the Atlantic Ocean's worst environmental disaster ever.

Posted by Wishnitwas1998
where TN, MS, and AL meet
Member since Oct 2010
61730 posts
Posted on 12/17/16 at 1:38 pm to
Was gonna post the Asian carp
Posted by PAGator
Member since Jul 2015
2339 posts
Posted on 12/17/16 at 1:40 pm to
quote:

1930s Red Imported Fire Ant, Solenopsis invicta, identified after Brazilian ships unloaded ant-infested cargo in the port of Mobile, and a 13-year-old boy–a certain E.O. Wilson, as he would later be known–reported the first colony of Red Imported Fire Ant in the US.


I refuse to be thankful for this
Posted by navynuke
Member since Jun 2016
5504 posts
Posted on 12/17/16 at 7:08 pm to
Not European but I would like to thank Owen Denny for introducing these to the US in 1881

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