[MAIPC] Summer Invasives.
HTI Gmail
historictimekeepers at gmail.com
Sun Aug 28 11:33:32 PDT 2016
Hey Art.
I used Acclaim Extra (fenoxaprop-p-ethyl) for the same reasons;
selective to stiltgrass and leaves natives and dicots alone. It seems
to have stopped the development but after one week the stiltgrass is not
dead although I think it is yellow. 1 pt in a 30 gallon tank of water.
Spot sprayed really but I used the full tank.
What should I expect and would Assure be better? Thanks.
I have been working on my own 1.5 acre meadow surrounded by state
highway on top (put in a 200 ft swale to dump the storm water/seed onto
a currently sacrificial part of my property), and a stiltgrass refugia
below me. I think I am getting ahead of it but the quest continues.
When I see tall plants (missed em) I did torch them and now if I see any
flowers I string trim em down the ground. The stuff I know I hit seems
to have stopped developing.
Plan to plant the sacrificial area with indian grass and bent grass and
then go after the stilt grass there too. But that is at least a year away.
And yes, it is worth it. The life we see around us now is much better
than sterile lawn.
Regards,
Dewey Clark
Club Naturalist
Co-District Manager (PA)
Election Committee Chair
Potomac Appalachian Trail Club
Maryland Master Naturalist
On 8/27/2016 9:50 PM, Art Gover wrote:
> We use the selective grass herbicide quizalofop-P (e.g. “Assure II”) at its lowest labeled rate, and find that stiltgrass is controlled while other grasses such as Leersia virginica, Muhlenbergia scherberi, and Brachyelytrum erectum are not affected, nor any dicots or non-grass monocots.
>
> Be well.
>
> Art
>
> Penn State Wildland Weed Management
> 116 ASI Building
> University Park, PA 16802
>
> (814) 863-9904
> (814) 863-7043 FAX
> http://plantscience.psu.edu/wildland
>
>> On Aug 27, 2016, at 11:17, Stephen Hiltner <stevehiltner at gmail.com> wrote:
>>
>> Sorry to hear. Perhaps development of a C4 pathway specific herbicide would help, since stiltgrass is said to be one of the few C4 species that grows in the shade? Googling brings up a few results--more than would come up a few years ago.
>>
>> On Sat, Aug 27, 2016 at 10:53 AM, MarneyB <marneyb at earthlink.net> wrote:
>> On a walk recently on the River Trail at Great Falls MD I noticed that Golden ragwort – Packera aurea - was able to deter Japanese Stiltgrass in an area where this invasive and had taken to a large extent.
>>
>>
>>
>> Marney
>>
>>
>>
>> From: MAIPC [mailto:maipc-bounces at lists.maipc.org] On Behalf Of Marc Imlay
>> Sent: Saturday, August 27, 2016 9:39 AM
>> To: maipc at lists.maipc.org
>> Subject: [MAIPC] Summer Invasives.
>>
>>
>>
>> I have found this year that the Japanese Stiltgrass is no longer controllable over 400 acres of parkland in spites of extensive use of pre-emergents in March. At the 200 acre Swann Park beefsteak is no longer controllable. And many folks have found the same for Wavyleaf basketgrass. . Twenty years ago it was very doable to save all our parks. So mid-late Summer invasives is very sad, especially since stiltgrass is so totally destructive and replaces the other ground vegetation.
>>
>>
>>
>> I remind myself that I have been successful with invasives for the rest of the year including garlic mustard and Lesser Celandine. For the late Summer invasives , biological control remains our best hope, both effective host specific from Eurasia, etc. as well as waiting for native biological controls to pop up as with Ailanthus after 200 years. .
>>
>>
>>
>> From: Imlay, Marc
>> Sent: Thursday, August 25, 2016 10:08 AM
>> To:
>> Subject: RE: Mniutes from August 2016 board meeting
>>
>>
>>
>> A top issue for invasive plant control folks is should we continue to remove all the Asiatic bittersweet, bush honeysuckle, juvenile garlic mustard, Japanese barberry, porcelain berry, beefsteak, multi flora rose, mimosa, wineberry, and mile-a minute. Or switch our resources to Japanese Stilt grass and wavyleaf basket grass that have become so much more abundant and destructive at our high priority sites.
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> Marc Imlay, PhD, Chair, MAIPC Biological control working Group Conservation biologist,
>>
>> Park Ranger Office, Non-native Invasive Plant Control coordinator. Marc.Imlay at pgparks.com
>>
>> (301) 442-5657 cell Natural and Historical Resources Division
>>
>> The Maryland-National Capital Park and Planning Commission
>>
>>
>>
>> Marc Imlay, PhD
>> Chair of the Biodiversity and Habitat Stewardship Committee for the Maryland Chapter of the Sierra Club.
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> <image001.jpg>
>>
>> Virus-free. www.avast.com
>>
>>
>>
>>
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