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Control of Invasive Species in the Forest

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Presentation on theme: "Control of Invasive Species in the Forest"— Presentation transcript:

1 Control of Invasive Species in the Forest
Matt Arndt Photo Credit: eeekeverywhere.wordpress.com

2 Major Species Autumn olive Bush honeysuckle Chinese pear
Garlic mustard Japanese honeysuckle Japanese hops Multiflora rose Tree-of-heaven en.rl8st.com media.arkansasonline.com Many infestations are associated with disturbance or old homesites Several species are more shade tolerant -- i.e. bush honeysuckle and garlic mustard – and occur in the forest interior; others are less so and typically occur on edges or in fields and openings – i.e. autumn olive and chinese pear Nearly all species are abundant seed producers gocolumbiamo.com nps.gov invasivore.org blog.mass.gov dnr.wi.gov nps.gov

3 Benefits and drawbacks to each
Control Options Foliar Treatment Cutting Stem Injection Grinding (bullhog) Pulling Bulldozer Goats! Foliar - PHOTO – will use a lot of chemical for blanket applications - Best with spot treatments - backpack sprayer; tank sprayer; backpack mist blower; UTV mounted mist blower; helicoptor - aerial spraying with helicopter has been reported as low as $60/ac - minimally selective Cutting - PHOTO – can be impossible for some species - can be very expensive, depending on severity of infestation - Some species are nearly impossible to cut (japanese hops, garlic mustard) or are very unpleasant (multiflora rose) - selective treatment Hack & Squirt - PHOTO – can be a tremendous amount of stems - very effective on woody species - leaves standing skeletons, which makes follow-up treatments difficult Grinding - PHOTO - Need access for machinery; sometimes not possible - immediate results - limited by slope and tree densities - does not treat roots - non-selective Pulling - PHOTO – can be difficult for large plants - very effective, particularly on small bush honeysuckle in moist soil - very selective, but time consuming Dozer - Very blunt instrument – can be the only effective option Goats - PHOTO – will eat nearly anything, but can be labor intensive and costly to build/ maintain fence - very promising, natural control by defoliation - Has real potential, especially on smaller tract sizes myweb.loras.edu gobiologic.com eeekeverywhere.wordpress.com Thestreettree.com Pecva.org Bayjournal.com Benefits and drawbacks to each

4 This slide and next do not show invasives, but show the impact goats can have
goatsonthego.com

5 Multiflora rose is better quality forage than alfalfa
goatsonthego.com

6 Bottom Line Treatment protocols will need to be fitted to each individual project based on a variety of factors Cost Tract size Severity of infestation Location Species Available resources Desired season of treatment Many projects will involve multiple treatment types Very unlikely to be a one-and-done treatment Multiple types – e.g. cutting of larger plants, pulling of smaller; grinding of flat areas, foliar application on steep; hack & squirt of dense stands, foliar spray on sporadic plants; grinding as first treatment, foliar spray of resprouts

7 If all else fails… Embrace it! goingtoseedinzone5.com


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