St. Johns County, FL · 1 hr 15 min from base

Invasive Species Removal in
St. Johns County, FL

Invasive species removal in St. Johns County targets Brazilian pepper, cogongrass, Chinese tallow, and Japanese climbing fern—species that compromise native habitats and reduce property values across the county's residential and conservation landscapes. Our programs combine mechanical treatment with herbicide follow-up to achieve multi-year suppression. Serving St. Augustine, Ponte Vedra, Ponte Vedra Beach, Elkton, and 6 more communities across St. Johns County.

Why Invasive Species Removal in St. Johns County

Targeted removal of Brazilian pepper, melaleuca, Australian pine, and other invasive vegetation. Selective clearing that preserves desirable native trees and landscape.

Properties bordering the GTM Research Reserve and the county's extensive conservation easement network face heightened expectations for invasive management, as invasive plant propagules from private land can compromise adjacent publicly funded restoration efforts. The rapid pace of land disturbance from new construction continually creates bare ground conditions that favor invasive establishment over native recolonization.

St. Johns County stretches from the Atlantic barrier islands westward across a coastal plain of maritime hammock, pine flatwoods, and tidal marsh along the Matanzas and Tolomato Rivers. The western interior rises gently onto sandy uplands used for agriculture—the Hastings area has been a center of potato farming since the early 1900s. The county's northern sector around Ponte Vedra and Nocatee features well-drained sandy ridges interspersed with freshwater wetlands, while the southern portion near Elkton transitions into broader flatwoods and creek-bottom swamp associated with the Pellicer Creek and Moses Creek basins.

Residential subdivision development dominates St. Johns County's clearing workload, with large master-planned communities like Nocatee, Shearwater, and Twin Creeks consuming hundreds of acres of flatwoods and scrub annually. Agricultural land conversion in the Elkton-Hastings corridor is accelerating as potato and sod farms sell to residential developers drawn by the county's top-ranked school system. Historic district renovations in St. Augustine require delicate selective clearing that respects heritage trees and archaeological sensitivity. The Ponte Vedra-Ponte Vedra Beach corridor generates demand for high-end estate lot clearing where specimen live oaks must be preserved while understory is removed to create manicured, park-like settings. St. Johns County has ranked among the fastest-growing counties in Florida for over a decade, adding more than 100,000 residents since 2010. The county's consistently top-rated school district is the primary draw for families relocating from Duval County and out of state, and the continued buildout of Nocatee—planned for over 30,000 homes at full capacity—ensures sustained demand for land clearing services.

Our Invasive Species Removal Process in St. Johns County

01

Free Estimate

We assess your St. Johns County property in person — evaluating terrain, vegetation density, and equipment access to deliver an accurate T&M quote.

02

MSA Agreement

Clear scope, timeline, and expectations documented in our Master Service Agreement before any equipment rolls. No surprises, no hidden charges.

03

Production

CAT track loaders and 20+ ton excavators mobilize to your St. Johns County site. Production-grade equipment means faster timelines and cleaner results.

04

Final Walkthrough

Owner Jeremiah Anderson walks the finished project with you to confirm every detail meets expectations before we close out the job.

Environmental Considerations in St. Johns County

St. Augustine's historic district overlay imposes additional vegetation removal restrictions that protect the city's colonial-era tree canopy, particularly specimen live oaks and magnolias within the downtown core. The Guana Tolomato Matanzas (GTM) National Estuarine Research Reserve protects over 73,000 acres of coastal habitat in the county, and development adjacent to the reserve triggers enhanced environmental review and buffer requirements. Right whale calving grounds off the St. Johns coast restrict coastal construction noise and lighting during the November-through-April calving season. Gopher tortoise populations are dense on the sandy uplands throughout the Nocatee and World Golf Village growth corridors, requiring pre-clearing surveys and FWC relocation permits.

Protected species: St. Johns County is home to Gopher tortoise, North Atlantic right whale, Eastern indigo snake, Wood stork, Least tern, Piping plover, Bald eagle, Anastasia Island beach mouse, Florida scrub-jay. Pre-clearing wildlife surveys may be required depending on habitat type and project scope.

Waterways & buffers: Properties near Matanzas River, Tolomato River, San Sebastian River, Intracoastal Waterway, Pellicer Creek, Moses Creek, Guana River, Julington Creek, Durbin Creek, Six Mile Creek may require setback buffers and water management district permits. TreeShop works within all required buffer zones.

Soil conditions: Northern St. Johns County's residential growth areas sit on Hurricane, Orsino, and Tavares fine sands with moderate to good drainage that supports rapid development. The Hastings agricultural district features Ellzey, Placid, and Floridana fine sands—muck-enriched soils that retain moisture for crop production but require drainage management for residential use. Coastal areas contain Canaveral and Palm Beach fine sands on barrier island dunes and relict beach ridges.

Invasive Species Removal Near You in St. Johns County

TreeShop provides professional invasive species removal across St. Johns County, including:

St. Augustine Ponte Vedra Ponte Vedra Beach Elkton Hastings World Golf Village Nocatee Fruit Cove Julington Creek Switzerland

Invasive Species Removal FAQ — St. Johns County

How much does invasive species removal cost in St. Johns County?
Invasive Species Removal in St. Johns County starts at $2,500/acre. Final pricing is based on a Time & Materials (T&M) model, determined after an on-site assessment of your property's terrain, vegetation density, and accessibility. Every property in St. Johns County is different — st conditions mean pricing varies based on what we encounter on-site.
Do you need permits for invasive species removal in St. Johns County?
St. Johns County enforces a tree protection ordinance that requires permits for removal of any tree over 8 inches DBH on residential parcels and imposes replacement ratios for protected species including live oak, Southern magnolia, and red cedar. Work within the Coastal Construction Control Line requires DEP permits, and the county's Concurrency Management System ties clearing and development approvals to available infrastructure capacity. Wetland impacts are permitted through the St. Johns River Water Management District.
What equipment do you use for invasive species removal in St. Johns County?
TreeShop deploys production-grade CAT track loaders, 20+ ton excavators, and specialized forestry mulcher heads including Fecon attachments. For St. Johns County properties with Live oak, Sand pine, Slash pine, our equipment is purpose-built to handle the local conditions efficiently. Northern St.
How long does invasive species removal take in St. Johns County?
Project timelines in St. Johns County depend on acreage, vegetation density, and terrain. Most residential lots (under 1 acre) are completed in 1-3 days. Larger parcels with dense live oak and sand pine take proportionally longer. We provide timeline estimates during your free on-site assessment.
Is TreeShop licensed to work in St. Johns County?
Yes. TreeShop LLC is fully licensed and insured to operate across all 32 counties in our Central Florida service area, including St. Johns County. We carry comprehensive general liability and workers' compensation insurance. Owner Jeremiah Anderson personally oversees every project from estimate through final walkthrough.

Invasive Species Removal

$2,500/acre

Time & Materials billing. Free on-site estimate for St. Johns County properties. Transport: Medium.

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Invasive Species Removal in St. Johns County

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