1 / 19

Definitions

Definitions . Control – prevention of spread by removing fruits and limiting vegetative spread Eradicate – to completely remove a species from a location. Subjects. Approaches to control Mechanical Herbicides Common species. Manual and Mechanical. Hand pulling -can use volunteers

verdi
Download Presentation

Definitions

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Definitions • Control – prevention of spread by removing fruits and limiting vegetative spread • Eradicate – to completely remove a species from a location

  2. Subjects • Approaches to control • Mechanical • Herbicides • Common species

  3. Manual and Mechanical • Hand pulling -can use volunteers -good for small infestations -can have low ecological impact -need to keep equipment clean -best for annuals or shallow rooted perennials

  4. Manual and Mechanical • Tillage/hoeing • Mowing, brush cutting, weed eating • Best for species that don’t coppice • “controls” – does not eradicate except through repeated use • Girdling – remove cambium (do not use on coppicing species) • Mulching – bark, chips, hay, hogfuel, cardboard, carpet • Flooding/drawdowns • Fire

  5. Manual or Mechanical • Soil solarization – clear or black plastic - kills tissue if around 113-131 degrees F - soil should be moist - can reduce weed populations for more than a year - not as good for rhizomatous species

  6. Waipuna • Hot foam containing sugar extracts from corn and coconut (originally hot water/steam) – not an herbicide • Expensive

  7. Grazing • Can control or encourage invasive plants • Can use cattle, goats, sheep, geese, chickens, ducks, etc. • Need to fence or pen them in • Make take several years

  8. Herbicides • Salts used in ancient times • 1902- Army Corps of Engineers, sodium arsenite • 1941 2,4,D synthesized – growth regulator • 1944 – 2,4,D used on broadleafs

  9. Mechanisms - Herbicides • Inhibit respiration • Arsenic compounds • Metallo-organics (also based on arsenics) • Phenols

  10. Mechanisms - Herbicides • Inhibit plant growth – hormone disruptors -absisic acid – no herbicides -cytokinens – no herbicides -Gibberellins – affects plant height, bud dormancy, seed germination – more of a growth regulator than herbicide

  11. Mechanisms - Herbicides Hormones, cont. • Ethylene – no herbicides • Auxins – 2,4,D (Weed B Gone) – causes excess cell division and overgrowth, good on broadleaf weeds, non-persisting, low mammalian toxicity – BUT… 2,4,5,T – better for woody plants >> +dioxin = Agent Orange

  12. Mechanisms - Herbicides • Inhibitors of biosynthetic processes • Cell division – “pre-emergent” • Nucleic acid or protein synthesis inhibitors – “pre-emergent” • Glyphosate – non-selective contact herbicide, interrupts the shikimate pathway – amino acid production pathway not found in animals – “post-emergent”

  13. Considerations • Non-target species • Use best management practices for handling concentrates • Follow ALL laws • Must post treated areas • Carefully assess site conditions, including weather • Likely cannot use volunteers

  14. Methods of Application • Foliar – spot,boom • Basal bark • Cut stump • Injected into cambium • Soil – pre-emergent http://tncweeds.ucdavis.edu/

  15. Reed Canary GrassPhalaris arundinacea • Rhizomatous grass • Mow 5X +/yr • Mulches (+ cardboard) • Glyphosate (2%) • Shading with plantings

  16. English IvyHedera helix • Fast-growing ground cover • Remove vertical vines first • Pull and wad vines on ground • Can use string trimmer followed by glyphosate or triclopyr

  17. Japanese KnotweedFallopia japonica • Strongly rhizomatous shrub • Very hard to kill • 2X/month mowing for 3 years • Injection – 5 ml of 100% glyphosate • Triclopyr or glyphosate

  18. Himalayan blackberryRubus armeniacus • Repeated mowing • Digging • Cut stump, treat with triclopyr or triclopyr + 2,4 - D

More Related