Managing Invasive Woodland Plants

61
Managing Woodland Invasive Plants John Exo Feb. 18, 2012 [email protected]

description

Comprehensive presentation on managing invasive woodland plants. Please respect author acknowledgement protocol.

Transcript of Managing Invasive Woodland Plants

Page 1: Managing Invasive Woodland Plants

Managing Woodland Invasive Plants

John ExoFeb. 18, 2012

[email protected]

Page 2: Managing Invasive Woodland Plants

Today’s Outcomes

• Know why species are invasive• Determine management goals• Understand range of management methods• Know integrated strategies

Page 3: Managing Invasive Woodland Plants

From John T. Curtis,

Vegetation of Wisconsin, 1959

Early Vegetation

Page 4: Managing Invasive Woodland Plants

Early Invasives?

“Our waters filled with fish, and the air with game birds, and the rock ledges with rattlesnakes, and the woods with large game…We have no Canada thistles or mean men.”

Wm. H Canfield, 1842Sauk County Surveyor

Page 5: Managing Invasive Woodland Plants

Invasive Beginnings

Wisconsin Historical Society

Page 6: Managing Invasive Woodland Plants

Invasives Follow Us

Page 7: Managing Invasive Woodland Plants

Definitions

“Invasive” definitions differ depending on the goal.

“…causes economic harm to….” “interferes with land management goals…” “kills or displaces populations of native species…”

Page 8: Managing Invasive Woodland Plants

What makes a plant invasive?

• Tolerate wide range of soil, light, other conditions

• Enjoy longer growing period• Ability to alter soil chemistry• Prolific seed production• Have few or no natural controls

Page 9: Managing Invasive Woodland Plants

What do we do?

Learn to ID and know plants’ biology Take inventory, map Create a plan Learn & use control methods Monitor & adapt

Page 10: Managing Invasive Woodland Plants

Know thy enemy

Learn to identify the plants Seedling Adult Dormancy

Learn plants’ biology Annual Biennial Perennial

Page 11: Managing Invasive Woodland Plants

Know thy enemy

AnnualsLive one growing seasonSurvive through seedRagweed, foxtails

Page 12: Managing Invasive Woodland Plants

Know Thy Enemy: biennials

Live TWO growing seasonsSurvive through, and produce a lot of, seed

Garlic mustard*Wild parsnipBull, musk, plumeless thistleSweet cloverSpotted knapweed

Page 13: Managing Invasive Woodland Plants

Biennial biology

• Seedling/rosette yr 1• Flower, then die yr 2• Spread by seed only

– Vehicles– Shoes– Animals – Water

Page 14: Managing Invasive Woodland Plants

Garlic Mustard Effects

• Release soil toxins.• Disrupt soil-fungi

associations.• Reduce/prevent tree

regeneration.

Page 15: Managing Invasive Woodland Plants

Biennials: Bull, musk, plumeless thistle

Page 16: Managing Invasive Woodland Plants

Know Thy Enemy: Perennials

Greater threat to woodland goalsLive many growing seasonsSurvive through stored root energyReproduce via seeds, suckers, rootsImportant to know if:

Simple roots (honeysuckle)Creeping or clonal roots (Canada thistle)

Page 17: Managing Invasive Woodland Plants

Perennial: Multiflora Rose

Page 18: Managing Invasive Woodland Plants

Identifying characteristic:

bristles at base of petiole

Perennial: Multiflora Rose

Page 19: Managing Invasive Woodland Plants

Perennial: Common buckthorn

• Male & female plants.• Visible late into fall.• Use these features to

your advantage.

Page 20: Managing Invasive Woodland Plants

Unfair competition. . .

Page 21: Managing Invasive Woodland Plants

Perennials: Bush Honeysuckles

Habitat: upland, especially under roost treesBlooms: May to June; white, yellow, orange or pinkBerries: orange or redEarly leaf-out, late leaf drop

Page 22: Managing Invasive Woodland Plants

Perennials: Autumn olive

Habitat: dry uplandBlooms: May to JuneFlowers white and fragrantReproduces mostly by root suckering

Page 23: Managing Invasive Woodland Plants

Autumn olive

Page 24: Managing Invasive Woodland Plants

Perennial vine: Oriental bittersweet

• Woody vine that climbs other vegetation

• Thrives in a wide range of conditions

• Grows to 60+’ in length• Introduced as an

ornamental

Page 25: Managing Invasive Woodland Plants

Urtica/Flickr creative commons

Human vectored dispersal

Page 26: Managing Invasive Woodland Plants

Highly invasive and damaging

Vines strangle trees, reduce available light; added vine weight can break trees

Page 27: Managing Invasive Woodland Plants
Page 28: Managing Invasive Woodland Plants
Page 29: Managing Invasive Woodland Plants
Page 30: Managing Invasive Woodland Plants

Distinguishing bittersweets

American Oriental

Fruit capsule color

Fruit position

Page 31: Managing Invasive Woodland Plants

Problem Ornamental Species

• Japanese knotweed• Japanese barberry• buckthorns• Asian honeysuckles• Amur maple• Common tansy• Oriental, or Round-

leaved bittersweet

Page 32: Managing Invasive Woodland Plants

Take inventory

Aerial photo or scaled lot layout Estimate species present & density Identify land use – past, present & future Look beyond your property lines

Page 33: Managing Invasive Woodland Plants

Take Inventory

Page 34: Managing Invasive Woodland Plants

Prioritize!

Importance of habitat? Size of population? Rate of spread? Interfere with land use? Resources available? Other priorities?

Page 35: Managing Invasive Woodland Plants

General Management Strategies• Monitor, especially

along trails, roads• Look beyond property

lines• Prioritize species; areas• Timing is critical• Attack outer edges first

Page 36: Managing Invasive Woodland Plants

Management methods• Ounce of prevention…• Pull• Cut/Mow • Girdle• Cut stem• Graze• Prescribed fire• Herbicide (foliar, basal bark)• Integrated methods

Page 37: Managing Invasive Woodland Plants

Prevention

• Encourage competition• Early detection & removal of new species• Consider steps to prevent introduction during

timber management

Page 38: Managing Invasive Woodland Plants

Pull• Good for young people,

small infestations, small plants.

• *Flowers can still set seed after pulling.

Page 39: Managing Invasive Woodland Plants

Mow/Cut• Goal: weaken plant; prevent seed set.• Timing is critical—best when in flower.• Repeated mowing often needed• Weakens, but may not kill plants.• Can be combined with herbicide methods.

Page 40: Managing Invasive Woodland Plants

Mowing/Cutting Equipment

Page 41: Managing Invasive Woodland Plants

Grazing

Principles similar to mowingGoats can be “trained” to some speciesRepeated treatments necessaryContractors available

Page 42: Managing Invasive Woodland Plants

Girdle

• Goal: starve roots• Good for clonal tree

species.• Labor intensive.• Very effective if done

correctly.• Timing: June-July best.• 1 or 2 step method.

Photo courtesy of Tom Brock

Photo courtesy: Tom Brock

Page 43: Managing Invasive Woodland Plants

Girdling – Step 1 Girdling – Step 2

Page 44: Managing Invasive Woodland Plants

Cut-Stem Treatment• Goal: kill plant• Good winter option• Very targeted use

of herbicides

Photo: Savanna Oaks Foundation, Inc

Phot

o co

urte

sy o

f Tom

Bro

ck

Page 45: Managing Invasive Woodland Plants

Cut-stem Control Method

Target: • Shrubs/trees• buckthorn, honeysuckle, autumn olive, prickly ash,

multi-flora rose, undesirable trees, etc.

Herbicides: • Systemic• Active ingredients glyphosate (Roundup/generic) or

triclopyr (Garlon 4/Element 4)

Page 46: Managing Invasive Woodland Plants

Cut-stem Control Method

Timing: • Summer, Fall or Winter preferred• Avoid early spring and deep snow periods• Above-freezing temps with glyphosate• Triclopyr (Garlon) at any temperature• Apply glyphosate within minutes of cutting.

Page 47: Managing Invasive Woodland Plants

Cut-stem Control Method

Technique: • Cut stems at no higher than 6”.• Work in pairs, if possible, to

avoid “escapes”.• Work in a pattern.• Treat only outer edge of larger

stumps.

Photo courtesy: Tom Brock

Page 48: Managing Invasive Woodland Plants

Prescribed Fire

Photo courtesy of Tom Brock

Requires training, experience

Specialized equipment Good public relations Good neighbor relations Timing! Effective when integrated

with other methods

Page 49: Managing Invasive Woodland Plants

Foliar herbicide

• Safety first• Better for larger infestations• Selective vs. non-selective

herbicides• Pre- vs. post-emergence

application

Page 50: Managing Invasive Woodland Plants

Foliar herbicide

Timing• Rosette stage best for

biennials.• Before flowering, in

general.• Combine with fire/mow.

Page 51: Managing Invasive Woodland Plants

Basal bark herbicide

• Small; smooth bark• Generally, single-stem

shrubs & trees• Treat all clone stems• Oil-based chemicals

(triclopyr: Garlon 4 or Element 4)

Photos courtesy of Tom Brock

Page 52: Managing Invasive Woodland Plants

Integrated Methods

• Successful control efforts include:– Integrated approach– monitoring – early detection.

Photos courtesy Tom Brock

Page 53: Managing Invasive Woodland Plants

Other Precautions

• Clean boots to prevent seed spread (wheeled vehicles, too?).

• Minimize soil disturbance.• Consider spread by wildlife & water.• Monitor imported materials (gravel, topsoil,

mulch, etc).

Page 54: Managing Invasive Woodland Plants

Develop a management plan•Garlic mustard detected•Goal is to …

Road

Page 55: Managing Invasive Woodland Plants

Develop a management plan

Road

Garlic mustard control1. Develop a map2. Satellite plants--goal to eradicate.3. Extensive patch along road--goal

to prevent further spread.

Page 56: Managing Invasive Woodland Plants

Example Plan

• Satellite populations:– Pull 2nd year plants before flowering– Spray 1st year plants in fall or very early spring

Page 57: Managing Invasive Woodland Plants

Example Plan

• Large patch along road/trail:– Mow, pull, spray along road before seed set.– Work perimeter inward

• Spray rosettes fall/early spring• Pull escapes in between

• Repeat, monitor, re-map subsequent years.

Page 58: Managing Invasive Woodland Plants

Volunteer Opportunities

Learn while doing• Kickapoo Valley Woods Cooperative• The Prairie Enthusiasts• The Nature Conservancy

Page 59: Managing Invasive Woodland Plants

Other Resources

• County Extension office– fyi.uwex.edu/weedsci

• County DNR foresters– dnr.wi.gov/topic/ForestHealth/

• Oaksavannas.org• www.ipaw.org

Page 60: Managing Invasive Woodland Plants

Summary

• Early detection & prevention are critical• New species introduction & spread mostly

dependent on our behavior• Set realistic goals• Make a plan, then adapt, using…• Integrated methods

Page 61: Managing Invasive Woodland Plants

Questions?

[email protected](608) 355-3554