[MAIPC] The Garlic Monster - Third Year Adults and Beyond

Marc Imlay ialm at erols.com
Thu Jun 4 03:30:50 PDT 2015


That is what I do. I carry a trowel for the one in 10 that does not come out
easy when I pull. Marc


-----Original Message-----
From: MAIPC [mailto:maipc-bounces at lists.maipc.org] On Behalf Of Margaret
Chatham
Sent: Wednesday, June 03, 2015 7:10 PM
To: maipc at lists.maipc.org
Subject: Re: [MAIPC] The Garlic Monster - Third Year Adults and Beyond

Or you could continue to pull the basal rosettes, but have a pair of pliers
in your pocket to extract the roots immediately if they break off. I still
like the idea of being able to fit a thousand pulled plants into a grocery
bag instead of having to lug a large garbage bag around.

On 6/3/15 12:27 PM, "Bailey, Whitney - FS" <whitneybailey at fs.fed.us
<mailto:whitneybailey at fs.fed.us> > wrote:

> After having pulled every basal floret I saw for 2 months early this 
> spring, and then seeing hundreds of dwarf plants pop up,  I would 
> hypothesize that "dwarves" are created when the basal floret or adult 
> plant is pulled, but some roots are left behind.  Therefore I'm 
> thinking to stop pulling florets and only apply Round-up to them, as 
> dwarf flowering plants are much harder to find, and thus more likely 
> to live long enough to set seed.  I'll continue to pull adults, but 
> will expect that if the root breaks off, that I'll have another plant
there the next year.
> 
> Whitney Bailey
> Forest Ecologist
> Forest Service
> Monongahela National Forest
> p: 304-636-1800 x280
> whitneybailey at fs.fed.us <mailto:whitneybailey at fs.fed.us> 
> 200 Sycamore St. 
> Elkins, WV 26241
> www.fs.fed.us <http://www.fs.fed.us> 
> 
> Caring for the land and serving people
> 
> 
> 
> -----Original Message-----
> From: MAIPC [mailto:maipc-bounces at lists.maipc.org] On Behalf Of 
> maipc-request at lists.maipc.org <mailto:maipc-request at lists.maipc.org> 
> Sent: Wednesday, June 03, 2015 11:32 AM
> To: maipc at lists.maipc.org <mailto:maipc at lists.maipc.org> 
> Subject: MAIPC Digest, Vol 44, Issue 10
> 
> Send MAIPC mailing list submissions to maipc at lists.maipc.org
<mailto:maipc at lists.maipc.org> 
> 
> To subscribe or unsubscribe via the World Wide Web, visit 
> http://lists.maipc.org/listinfo.cgi/maipc-maipc.org
> or, via email, send a message with subject or body 'help' to 
> maipc-request at lists.maipc.org <mailto:maipc-request at lists.maipc.org> 
> 
> You can reach the person managing the list at 
> maipc-owner at lists.maipc.org <mailto:maipc-owner at lists.maipc.org> 
> 
> When replying, please edit your Subject line so it is more specific than
"Re:
> Contents of MAIPC digest..."
> 
> 
> Today's Topics:
> 
>    1. Re: The Garlic Monster - Third Year Adults and Beyond. (frazmo)
> 
> 
> ----------------------------------------------------------------------
> 
> Message: 1
> Date: Wed, 3 Jun 2015 11:25:16 -0400
> From: frazmo <frazmo at gmail.com <mailto:frazmo at gmail.com> >
> To: "Ellis, Michael" <Michael.Ellis at pgparks.com
<mailto:Michael.Ellis at pgparks.com> >
> Cc: MA-IPC MA-IPC <maipc at lists.maipc.org <mailto:maipc at lists.maipc.org> >
> Subject: Re: [MAIPC] The Garlic Monster - Third Year Adults and 
> Beyond.
> Message-ID:
> <CAOO+nP87k5oTd-zY3WBqaeDiXCPz4Awr-wFPQYCAOeeUSMR3Xg at mail.gmail.com
<mailto:CAOO+nP87k5oTd-zY3WBqaeDiXCPz4Awr-wFPQYCAOeeUSMR3Xg at mail.gmail.com>
>
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="utf-8"
> 
> This discussion makes me wonder about two things:
> 
> 1. Could we unwittingly be creating selection for those "super" Garlic 
> Mustard plants that are able to survive having the main stem broken 
> off and develop viable seeds from resprouts later?
> Similarly I have wondered whether we may be creating selection 
> pressure for dwarfism as we pull the most prominent plants. I find many
flowering dwarves.
> 
> 2. Given the reports of allelopathic properties of GM, folks have 
> suggested that it is undesirable to leave roots in place since they 
> presumably contribute to the release of the allelopathic agents. This 
> may be an additional argument in facor of maximizing effort to get the
roots out.
> 
> Cheers,  Steve Young, "Arlington Steve"
> MAIPC Treasurer
> Blog: Plantwhacker.com
> 
> 
> On Thu, May 28, 2015 at 2:12 PM, Ellis, Michael 
> <Michael.Ellis at pgparks.com <mailto:Michael.Ellis at pgparks.com> >
> wrote:
> 
>>  As we begin to wrap up our Garlic Mustard season, I've become 
>> fascinated by the resiliency of the species.
>> 
>>  I'm seeing tremendous numbers of garlic mustard adults surviving 
>> into a third year if their stems were broken off in the year prior. 
>> Their wounds simply heal, their roots become massive and they sprout 
>> new stems and seeds.
>> 
>>  Here is a photo I took today in Beltsville of a specimen that 
>> survived our great Garlic Mustard pull of 2014, healed, and re-emerged:
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> Would this not imply that these plants can come up again, possibly a 
>> fourth of fifth year if seeding was unsuccessful?
>> 
>>  This has me wondering if plants could bounce back after damage from 
>> say, an introduced biological control.
>> 
>>  Any thoughts?
>> 
>> Michael Ellis
>> Non-Native Invasive Plant Specialist
>> Natural and Historical Resources Division, Park Ranger Office The 
>> Maryland-National Capital Park and Planning Commission 
>> www.pgparks.com <http://www.pgparks.com> 
>> 
>> 240-429-5042
>> 
>> 
>> _______________________________________________
>> MAIPC mailing list
>> MAIPC at lists.maipc.org <mailto:MAIPC at lists.maipc.org> 
>> http://lists.maipc.org/listinfo.cgi/maipc-maipc.org
>> 
>> 
> -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was 
> scrubbed...
> URL: 
> <http://lists.maipc.org/pipermail/maipc-maipc.org/attachments/20150603
> /aece538
> e/attachment.htm>
> -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was 
> scrubbed...
> Name: 
> 15F3A255-EE6B-4E9E-A31A-EEC282D7ACA222212748-702C-4FD4-B344-093E43D807
> 7B.jpg
> Type: image/jpeg
> Size: 1807741 bytes
> Desc: not available
> URL: 
> <http://lists.maipc.org/pipermail/maipc-maipc.org/attachments/20150603
> /aece538
> e/attachment.jpg>
> 
> ------------------------------
> 
> Subject: Digest Footer
> 
> _______________________________________________
> MAIPC mailing list
> MAIPC at lists.maipc.org <mailto:MAIPC at lists.maipc.org> 
> http://lists.maipc.org/listinfo.cgi/maipc-maipc.org
> 
> 
> ------------------------------
> 
> End of MAIPC Digest, Vol 44, Issue 10
> *************************************
> _______________________________________________
> MAIPC mailing list
> MAIPC at lists.maipc.org <mailto:MAIPC at lists.maipc.org> 
> http://lists.maipc.org/listinfo.cgi/maipc-maipc.org


_______________________________________________
MAIPC mailing list
MAIPC at lists.maipc.org <mailto:MAIPC at lists.maipc.org> 
http://lists.maipc.org/listinfo.cgi/maipc-maipc.org


---
This email has been checked for viruses by Avast antivirus software.
https://www.avast.com/antivirus
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://lists.maipc.org/pipermail/maipc-maipc.org/attachments/20150604/cb15a84e/attachment-0001.htm>


More information about the MAIPC mailing list