Sunday, October 10, 2010

Coming to a Radside Near You


Japanese knotweed (Fallopia japonica) is listed by the World Conservation Union as on of the World's 100 Worst Invasive Species. The roots of Japanese knotweed, also known as Mexican bamboo, can break up blacktop roads and concrete foundations. Many banks in Scotland refuse to write mortgages for property whose soil is infested this invader.

The plant spreads through both sexual reproduction and vegetatively through rhizomes. The plant sends dies back to the ground every fall and sends up new stalks that reach more than 10 feet tall. A small piece of root falling off the back of a dump truck is enough to spark a new clone. Once established, a clone can spread ten meters a year. Its roots reach 20-25 feet deep. Attempting to remove Fallopia japonica by digging it up is extremely dangerous, as each little piece of the massive root system has the potential to start a new clone. The most effective means of control is herbicide applied injected into hollow stalks or as a foliar spray, several times a year, over multiple years.

The image above was recently taken along a county highway just south of Spring Green. This stand is particularly dangerous because it includes seed producing female plants. The fact that it has seed means that there is also a male plant nearby to pollinate it.

The Southwestern Wisconsin Weed Management Association (SWWMA) is a coalition of private landowners, public land managers, highway departments, consultants and contractors, as well as conservation groups dedicated to controlling the spread of invasive plants and preventing new speices from getting established. Our service area includes Grant, Lafayette, Iowa, Dane, Crawford, Richland and Sauk counties in Wisconsin.

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