[MAIPC] Honeysuckle Chipping

Alison Pearce Alison.Pearce at anshome.org
Fri Mar 30 08:16:36 PDT 2018


Thanks so much to Conner and others for your advice.  The consensus seems to be that the dead honeysuckle biomass is not a major concern.  So I will be chipping some of it mostly for aesthetic reasons, and creating brush piles with the rest.  Anyone have a chipper they love to recommend that can be pulled by hand until someone buys me a Gator??
Best,
Alison

From: Conner McBane [mailto:cmcbane at appalachiantrail.org]
Sent: Monday, March 26, 2018 12:05 PM
To: Alison Pearce; 'maipc at lists.maipc.org'
Subject: Re: Honeysuckle Chipping


Hi Alison,



I have done a lot of amur honeysuckle management--chipping, pulling, and cut-stump treatments. Although this is anecdotal evidence, I have never seen negative impacts from chipping or leaving amur honeysuckle skeletons in a pile. It is amazing how fast the spice bush has come back in many of the areas I have worked on--we are actually having to manage some of the spice bush as well just to keep these areas in early-succession. My recommendation would be to pile the brush to provide wildlife habitat, but again like Norris said, if it's too labor intensive do not bother. From my experience, chipping is almost not worth it if you have equipment that can move some of the honeysuckle brush.



Conner McBane
Natural Resource Specialist
Appalachian Trail Conservancy
416 Campbell Ave | Suite 101
Roanoke, VA 24016
Phone: 540-427-7098
Cell: 540-525-6812
Fax: 540-904-4368
cmcbane at appalachiantrail.org<mailto:eprice at appalachiantrail.org>
www.appalachiantrail.org<http://www.appalachiantrail.org/>

________________________________
From: MAIPC <maipc-bounces at lists.maipc.org<mailto:maipc-bounces at lists.maipc.org>> on behalf of Alison Pearce <Alison.Pearce at anshome.org<mailto:Alison.Pearce at anshome.org>>
Sent: Wednesday, March 21, 2018 2:30:35 PM
To: 'maipc at lists.maipc.org'
Subject: [MAIPC] Honeysuckle Chipping


Hi everyone,

Does anyone have information about whether it is advisable to leave wood chips in place when removing amur honeysuckle from a forest?  I am planning to cut our dense infestation of honeysuckle at Woodend Nature Sanctuary and treat stumps with glyphosate.  We have a spicebush population that hopefully will benefit from the reduced competition, plus we will be doing restoration planting of tree seedlings, shrub and herbaceous species.  My concern is whether the allelopathic effects of amur honeysuckle arise only from root exudates of live plants or whether decaying honeysuckle woodchips would also suppress other vegetation.

Any advice would be much appreciated,

Alison



[cid:image001.jpg at 01D3C818.91617550]

Alison Pearce, PhD


Alison Pearce, PhD
Director of Restoration
Audubon Naturalist Society
8940 Jones Mill Road
Chevy Chase, MD 20815
(301) 652-9188 x30
Alison.Pearce at anshome.org<mailto:Alison.Pearce at anshome.org>


[Appalachian Trail Logo]

The Appalachian Trail Conservancy's mission is to preserve and manage the Appalachian Trail - ensuring that its vast natural beauty and priceless cultural heritage can be shared and enjoyed today, tomorrow, and for centuries to come. To become a member, volunteer, or learn more, visit www.appalachiantrail.org<http://www.appalachiantrail.org>.
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://lists.maipc.org/pipermail/maipc-maipc.org/attachments/20180330/29f056a0/attachment-0001.html>
-------------- next part --------------
A non-text attachment was scrubbed...
Name: image001.jpg
Type: image/jpeg
Size: 34895 bytes
Desc: image001.jpg
URL: <http://lists.maipc.org/pipermail/maipc-maipc.org/attachments/20180330/29f056a0/attachment-0001.jpg>


More information about the MAIPC mailing list