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Recognizing Invasive Species in Western New York Stormwater Management Reducing Pollution Characteristics of Invasive Species • Reproduce abundantly and (plants) by many means. • Spread by wind, water, and/or animals, people and machinery. • Relatively immune to diseases, and predation in new area. • Tolerate wide range of habitat conditions. • May hybridize with native counterparts and their genes dominate. • Alter soil and/or water chemistry: alter habitat. Some Common Invasive Plants “Canada” Thistle – photograph: along I 90 Controls for Canada Thistle ● ● ● Seeds viable for 20 years, roots regenerate Repeat cutting to exhaust root stock Systemic herbicide – ● Glyphosate DO NOT COMPOST Giant Hogweed Grows up to 14' high. Flower heads may be 2 ½ ' diameter. Can produce 20,000 seeds from a single flower head. Sap can cause severe burns, permanent scarring and blindness in the presence of sunlight and moisture. Federally listed as a noxious weed. If you find this weed, call the DEC hotline: (845) 256-3111 Avoid exposure. Serious, long lasting burns result from sap exposure. Call DEC for assistance if you find this plant present. Japanese Knotweed Highway Department worker looking for a culvert pipe... Japanese Knotweed ● ● ● Ecological threat to riparian areas & road ditches Spreads quickly. Forms dense thickets. Excludes native vegetation. Alters natural ecosystems. Winter season knotweed pictured . Rapidly colonizes disturbed channel slopes, gravel bars and islands. Survives severe flood events/ice scour. Populations are extremely persistent. Roots can penetrate >10’. Seeds are viable for many years. Exposes soil to (dormant season) erosion. Mowing or weed whacking will spread the plant. • • Roots can go 16 feet deep: may not be possible to remove by digging. • Do not attempt to compost. • Glyphosate applied to the foliage is effective but follow up treatments will be needed over one to two years • Natural herbicides (e.g.horticultural vinegar) will not work on knotweed as it only burns the foliage. To effectively kill knotweed a systemic herbicide is needed to target the roots. Black Swallow Wort ● ● Outcompetes native plants, replaces plants with habitat value. Harms bird and butterfly populations. Black Swallow Wort ● ● ● Systemic herbicide applied to cut stems is most effective chemical control. Mow to prevent seed pod production. Dig up roots before seed pod production. Seed pods Mile-A-Minute Vine Mile-A-Minute Vine ● ● ● Grows up to 6” daily. Smothers other plants, interferes with forest regeneration. Causes habitat disturbances. Mile-A-Minute Vine Controls ● ● ● ● Mow in May-June before plants set seeds. Pull by hand before plants mature: stem barbs harden as plants age. Plants can be composted if no seeds are present. Even small green seeds will germinate. Do not compost if seeds are present. Tree of Heaven (Ailanthus altissima) Flowers have unpleasant odor. Tree Of Heaven ● ● ● Wood is weak, coarse grained. ● Fast growing, prolific seeding. Creates dense thickets. Extensive root systems buckle sidewalks and foundations. Root chemicals poison other plants. Controls ● ● ● Pull seedlings. Systemic herbicides effective if used when trees are in full leaf. Cutting is ineffective unless repeated until root stock is exhausted. Emerald Ash Borer Adult is about ½ inch long Attacks only ash trees. Makes S-shaped tunnels beneath bark. Leaves a “D” shaped exit hole in the spring. Heavy woodpecker damage may indicate presence of larvae. Look for vertical splits in bark. Tree may sprout suckers. Causes crown die- back in 3-5 years. Signs of Emerald Ash Borer presence Vertical split in bark suckers Crown die-back Call DEC at 1 (866) 640-0652 Asian Longhorned Beetle Asian Longhorned Beetles attack hardwood trees. Adult Asian longhorned beetles are most active during the summer and early fall and can be seen on trees, branches, walls, outdoor furniture, cars, and sidewalks and caught in pool filters. • · · · Purchase firewood where you will burn it. Report beetle signs. Allow officials access to your property to perform surveys. Diversify the tree species that you plant. Beetles prefer to attack birches, Ohio buckeye, elms, willows and maple species including box elder, Norway, red, silver and sugar maples. Control: Purple Loosestrife Invasive Phragmites Garlic Mustard Eurasian Honeysuckle Buckthorn Brown Marmorated Stink Bug Oriental Bittersweet Hemlock Wooly Adelgid (white material on branches covers eggs) Aquatic Invasive Species: Most Important Controls ● Inspect and clean boats and trailers before and after visiting any water body. ● Drain any water from bilge, tanks, etc. ● Empty bait buckets on shore. Hydrilla verticillata Hydrilla verticillata ● Dense mats shade native aquatic plants, impair recreation, fishing, alter water chemistry. Reproduces primarily from tubers, plant fragments, and turions. Hydrilla Hydrilla can grow: • In almost any freshwater: springs, lakes, marshes, ditches, rivers, tidal zones. • In a few inches of water, to water more than 20 feet deep. • In low nutrient or high nutrient conditions, • In 7% salinity of seawater (Haller 1974). • In only 1% of full sunlight. • Low light compensation and saturation points and low CO2 compensation point make it a competitive plant because it can start growing in low light before other plants do (Van et al. 1976; Bowes 1977). • • • Hydrilla is somewhat winter-hardy; its optimum growth temperature, 68-81o F; its maximum temperature, 86o F (Kasselmann 1995). U.S. southern populations overwinter as perennials; northern populations overwinter and regrow from tubers. Sign at at lake in Texas... Water Chestnut Forms dense mats, blocking sunlight for other plants, creates oxygen deficiencies. Seeds become hardened, spines are painful to step on. Seeds may remain viable for up to 12 years. Other Aquatics Spiny water flea Round Goby These damaging invasive species arrived because of human activities. Rusty Crayfish Northern Snakehead Fish Brazilian Elodea Eurasian Water Milfoil Brittle Naiad Fan wort Curly Leaf Pond Weed Asian Clam European Frogbit Didymo (invasive algae) Photographs: University of Connecticut Ontario-Wayne Stormwater Coalition Town of Victor Town of Farmington Town of Macedon Town of Ontario Town of Walworth Village of Victor Village of Macedon Wayne County Highway Department Ontario County Highway Department Ontario County Soil and Water Conservation District Wayne County Soil and Water Conservation District For more Information contact: P J Emerick 480 North Main Street Canandaigua NY 14424 585-396-1450 [email protected]