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Award-winning science journalist seeks Ļć½¶Ö±²„invasive species expertise

Award-winning science journalist seeks Ļć½¶Ö±²„invasive species expertise

Contact: Vanessa Beeson

STARKVILLE, Miss.ā€”Julia Rosen, a journalist whose work has been featured in The New York Times, Science, and The Atlantic, recently visited Mississippi State to study cogongrass, an invasive plant species affecting southeastern forest ecosystems. Rosenā€™s visit was in preparation for her upcoming book ā€œGrassroots,ā€ which examines the history of humanityā€™s relationship with grass.

Julia Rosen (foreground) and Elizabeth Esser examine a cogongrass stand at MSUā€™s R.R. Foil Plant Science Research Center.
Julia Rosen (foreground) and Elizabeth Esser examine a cogongrass stand at MSUā€™s R.R. Foil Plant Science Research Center. The visit was part of Rosenā€™s research for her upcoming book ā€œGrassroots,ā€ which explores humanityā€™s relationship with grass species. (Photo by Dominique Belcher)

ā€œGrass is an interesting lens to approach questions Iā€™ve thought about for a long time:Ā  How do we think about nature and our place in it? How do we deal with repercussions of choices that have been made in the past, which cogongrass is the perfect example of,ā€ said Rosen, who has explored the intersection of western culture and nature throughout her career.

While researching different species for the bookā€™s chapter on invasive grasses, Rosen sought to include a weed impacting the southeastern U.S.Ā Ā Ā 

ā€œCogongrass captures many of the reasons why invasive grasses are such a problem. The early part of my book is why grass is this amazing plant and how it became such a huge part of the Earthā€™s ecosystems, and the invasive species chapter examines the flipside of thatā€”a lot of the reasons grass is an amazing plant also make it extremely invasive.ā€

Rosen visited cogongrass stands at the R.R. Foil Plant Science Research Center in Starkville and De Soto National Forest in Brooklyn, Mississippi, with Ashley Schulz, assistant professor, and Elizabeth Esser, doctoral student, in the Department of Forestry.

Esserā€™s doctoral research in the Ļć½¶Ö±²„Forest and Wildlife Research Center focuses on the invasive threat. The Cedarburg, Wisconsin, native understands the danger of invasive species firsthand. Growing up, she watched an eventual death of 10 acres of ash trees by the invasive emerald ash borerā€”a beetleā€”on her familyā€™s forestland. This spurred a passion for ecology and genetics, which she double majored in at the University of Georgia.Ā Ā 

ā€œI learned about MSUā€™s doctoral opportunity to study cogongrass through Dr. Rima Lucardi, research ecologist with the U.S. Department of Agricultureā€™s Forest Service in Athens, who also set up this visit with Julia,ā€ Esser said.

Esser explained that cogongrass threatens southern forests by forming dense mats that prevent native plant growth, disrupt ecosystems and endanger wildlife like the gopher tortoise. Its hotter-burning properties complicate fire-dominant landscapes, while current multiyear herbicide treatments remain unsustainable. Her work aims to tackle critical questions about how it spreads and whether it can be treated using its own chemical properties, a process known as autotoxicity.

ā€œCogongrass poses a major threat to forest regeneration and biodiversity,ā€ Esser said. ā€œOur goal is to better understand the genetic variation in different populations, which could reveal clues about its spread and susceptibility to treatments. Weā€™re also investigating whether we can harness the plant's own chemistry to fight it. We hope this work will help find more targeted, effective and environmentally conscious methods of control.ā€

In addition to Schulz and Esser, Rosen met with Erika Womack-Peoples, state chemist and biochemistry associate research professor; Gary Ervin, biological sciences professor; and John Byrd, plant and soil sciences extension and research professor, to gain their perspectives on the invasive species while visiting MSU.

Rosenā€™s book ā€œGrassroots: Our Long, Tangled Relationship with the Worldā€™s Most Remarkable Plantā€ is set to be published by Ecco, an imprint of Harper Collins, in 2026. It is supported by a book grant from the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation.

For more information on the Department of Forestry in MSUā€™s College of Forest Resources, visit . For more information on the Ļć½¶Ö±²„Forest and Wildlife Research Center, visit .

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