Download (Revised FROM C:\_DATA\PROJECTS\999-012-282

Survey
yes no Was this document useful for you?
   Thank you for your participation!

* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project

Document related concepts

Plant evolutionary developmental biology wikipedia , lookup

Plant ecology wikipedia , lookup

Plant reproduction wikipedia , lookup

Ornamental bulbous plant wikipedia , lookup

Glossary of plant morphology wikipedia , lookup

Perovskia atriplicifolia wikipedia , lookup

Transcript
(Revised FROM C:\_DATA\PROJECTS\999-012-282 - WINGS\CHRISTINES-Working DRAFT WINGS Manual\Section 3\3-3Binder_Invasive-Noxious.docx, \3-3-Binder_TopPriorityInvasives.docx)
769812929
1
Invasive – Noxious Plant Species
Invasive plants are plants which grow quickly and aggressively, spreading and displacing other plants.
Invasive plants are usually introduced by people either accidentally or on purpose, into a region far from
their native habitat. Invasive plants are often referred to as "exotic, alien, introduced, or non-native"
species. In their natural range, these species are limited by environmental, pest or disease conditions,
keeping these species in balance within their ecosystem. When introduced into an area where these
limitations are absent, some species have the ability to become invasive. These are the species we are
concerned about in conservation.
Characteristics of Invasive Plants
Invasive plants are noted for their ability to grow and spread aggressively. Invasive plants can be trees,
shrubs, vines, grasses, or flowers, and they can reproduce rapidly by roots, seeds, shoots, or all three.
Invasive plants tend to: not be native to North America, spread rapidly, reproducing by roots or shoots,
mature quickly, and if spread by seed, produce numerous seeds that disperse and sprout easily.
Invasives are typically generalists that can grow in many different conditions and are exploiters and
colonizers of disturbed ground.
Impact of Invasive Plants
Invasive species should not be used in your landscape because they are degrading our native plant
communities and ecosystems. In fact, second only to habitat loss, invasives are a major factor in the
decline of native plants. Plants like kudzu, purple loosestrife, and garlic mustard are displacing native
plants and degrading habitat for native insects, birds, and animals. Endangered, rare, and threatened
native species of plant and animals are especially at risk because they often occur in such small
populations that make them particularly vulnerable.
A very practical reason to avoid using invasive plants in your landscape is that they escape, spread and
require regular weeding to manage even when grown in a cultivated yard. In urban and suburban areas
the worst weeds are escaped ornamentals like Japanese honeysuckle, multiflora rose, Japanese
knotweed, tree-of-heaven and oriental bittersweet. In yards, gardens, fields, and parks these plants are
very expensive to control.
TOP PRIORITY INVASIVE SPECIES FOR PENNSYLVANIA
Japanese stiltgrass
2
DESCRIPTION
Japanese stiltgrass, or Nepalese browntop, is an annual grass with a sprawling habit. It germinates in
spring and grows slowly through the summer months, ultimately reaching heights of 2 to 3½ ft. The
leaves are pale green, lance-shaped, asymmetrical, 1 to 3 in. long, and have a distinctive shiny midrib.
Slender stalks of tiny flowers are produced in late summer (August through September-early October)
and dry fruits called achenes are produced soon afterwards.
HABITAT
Stiltgrass occurs in a wide variety of habitats including moist ground of open woods, floodplain forests,
wetlands, uplands, fields, thickets, paths, clearings, roadsides, ditches, utility corridors, and gardens. It
readily invades areas subject to regular mowing, tilling, foot traffic, and other soil disturbing activities as
well as natural disturbances such as the scouring associated with flooding. Stiltgrass appears to prefer
moist, acidic to neutral soils that are high in nitrogen.
Japanese knotweed
3
DESCRIPTION
Japanese knotweed is an upright, shrublike, herbaceous perennial that can grow to over 10 feet in
height. As with all members of this family, the base of the stem above each joint is surrounded by a
membranous sheath. Stems of Japanese knotweed are smooth, stout and swollen at joints where the
leaf meets the stem. Although leaf size may vary, they are normally about 6 inches long by 3 to 4 inches
wide, broadly oval to somewhat triangular and pointed at the tip. The minute greenish-white flowers
occur in attractive, branched sprays in summer and are followed soon after by small winged fruits. Seeds
are triangular, shiny, and very small, about 1/10 inch long.
HABITAT
Japanese knotweed can tolerate a variety of adverse conditions including full shade, high temperatures,
high salinity, and drought. It is found near water sources, such as along streams and rivers, in low-lying
areas, waste places, utility rights-of-way, and around old homesites. It can quickly become an invasive
pest in natural areas after escaping from cultivated gardens.
Japanese barberry
Fruit
Flowers
DESCRIPTION
Japanese barberry is a dense, deciduous, spiny shrub that grows 2 to 8 ft. high. The branches are brown,
deeply grooved, somewhat zig-zag in form and bear a single very sharp spine at each node. The leaves
are small (½ to 1 ½ inches long), oval to spatula-shaped, green, bluish-green, or dark reddish purple.
Flowering occurs from mid-April to May in the northeastern U.S. Pale yellow flowers about ¼ in (0.6 cm)
across hang in umbrella-shaped clusters of 2-4 flowers each along the length of the stem. The fruits are
bright red berries about 1/3 in (1 cm) long that are borne on narrow stalks. They mature during late
4
summer and fall and persist through the winter.
HABITAT
Barberry is shade tolerant, drought resistant, and adaptable to a variety of open and wooded habitats,
wetlands and disturbed areas. It prefers to grow in full sun to part shade but will flower and fruit even in
heavy shade.
Multiflora rose
DESCRIPTION
Multiflora rose is a thorny, perennial shrub with arching stems (canes), and leaves divided into five to
eleven sharply toothed leaflets. The base of each leaf stalk bears a pair of fringed bracts. Beginning in
May or June, clusters of showy, fragrant, white to pink flowers appear, each about an inch across. Small
bright red fruits, or rose hips, develop during the summer, becoming leathery, and remain on the plant
through the winter.
HABITAT
Multiflora rose has a wide tolerance for various soil, moisture, and light conditions. It occurs in dense
woods, prairies, along stream banks and roadsides and in open fields and pastures.
Autumn Olive
5
DESCRIPTION
Autumn olive is a deciduous shrub or small tree in the Oleaster family. Leaves are alternate, oval to
anceolate, and untoothed. The underside of the dark green leaf is covered with silver-white scales. The
plant may grow to a height of 20 feet. The small, light yellow flowers are borne along twigs after the
leaves have appeared early in the growing season. The small, round, juicy fruits are reddish to pink,
dotted with scales, and produced in great quantity.
HABITAT
Autumn olive has nitrogen-fixing root nodules which allow it to thrive in poor soils. Typical habitats are
disturbed areas, roadsides, pastures and fields in a wide range of soils. Autumn olive is drought tolerant
and may invade grasslands and sparse woodlands. It does not do well on wet sites or in densely forested
areas.
Japanese Honeysuckle
6
DESCRIPTION
Japanese honeysuckle is a perennial vine that climbs by twisting its stems around vertical structures,
including limbs and trunks of shrubs and small trees. Leaves are oblong to oval, sometimes lobed, have
short stalks, and occur in pairs along the stem. In southern and mid-Atlantic states, Japanese
honeysuckle often remains evergreen – its leaves remain attached through the winter. In colder
northern climates, the leaves may fall off after exposure to prolonged winter temperatures. Flowers are
tubular, with five fused petals, white to pink, turning yellow with age, very fragrant, and occur in pairs
along the stem at leaf junctures. Stems and leaves are sometimes covered with fine, soft hairs. Japanese
honeysuckle blooms from late April through July and sometimes into October. Small black fruits are
produced in autumn, each containing 2-3 oval to oblong, dark brown seeds about 1/4 inch across.
HABITAT
A ubiquitous invader, Japanese honeysuckle thrives in a wide variety of habitats including fields, forests,
wetlands, barrens, and all types of disturbed lands.
Garlic Mustard
7
1st year foliage
Upright seed pods
DESCRIPTION
Garlic mustard is a cool season biennial herb with stalked, triangular to heart-shaped, coarsely toothed
leaves that give off an odor of garlic when crushed. First-year plants appear as a rosette of green leaves
close to the ground. Rosettes remain green through the winter and develop into mature flowering
plants the following spring. Flowering plants of garlic mustard reach from 2 to 3-½ feet in height and
produce buttonlike clusters of small white flowers, each with four petals in the shape of a cross.
Recognition of garlic mustard is critical. Several white-flowered native plants, including toothworts
(Dentaria), sweet cicely (Osmorhiza claytonii), and early saxifrage (Saxifraga virginica), occur alongside
garlic mustard and may be mistaken for it.
Beginning in May (in the mid-Atlantic Coast Plain region), seeds are produced in erect, slender pods and
become shiny black when mature. By late June, when most garlic mustard plants have died, they can be
recognized only by the erect stalks of dry, pale brown seedpods that remain, and may hold viable seed,
through the summer.
HABITAT
8
Garlic mustard frequently occurs in moist, shaded soil of river floodplains, forests, roadsides, edges of
woods and trails edges and forest openings. Disturbed areas are most susceptible to rapid invasion and
dominance. Though invasive under a wide range of light and soil conditions, garlic mustard is associated
with calcareous soils and does not tolerate high acidity. Growing season inundation may limit invasion of
garlic mustard to some extent.
Below is a list from DCNR of invasive species and/or noxious species in the eastern United States:
Herbs and Forbs
COMMON NAME
Goutweed
SCIENTIFIC NAME
Aegopodium podagraria
OTHER COMMON NAMES
Bishop’s weed, snow on the mountain holy hay
Garlic mustard
Alliaria petiolata
Hedge mustard
Wild chervil
Anthriscus sylvestris
Cow parsley, keck, bur chervil
Narrowleaf bittercress
Cardamine impatiens
Bushy rock-cress
Musk thistle
Carduus nutans
Brown knapweed
hardheads
Centaurea jacea
Horse-knobs, rayed knapweed,
Black knapweed
hardheads
Centaurea nigra
Lesser or common knapweed,
Spotted knapweed
Centaurea stoebe
Greater celandine
Chelidonium majus
Canada thistle
Cirsium arvense
Bull thistle
Cirsium vulgare
Poison hemlock
Nodding thistle
Tetterwort
Canadian thistle
Conium maculatum
Jimsonweed
thorn apple
Datura stramonium
Jamestown weed, devil’s trumpet,
Hairy willow herb
Epilobium hirsutum
Great willowherb
Smallflower hairy willowherb
Epilobium parviflorum
Japanese knotweed
Fallopia japonica
Giant knotweed
Fleeceflower, Mexican bamboo
Fallopia sachalinensis
Sakhalin knotweed
Goatsrue
Galega officinalis
Holy hay, professor-weed, Italian fitch
Giant hogweed
flower
Heracleum mantegazzianum
Dames rocket
Hesperis matronalis
9
Giant cow parsnip or parsley, cartwheel
Dame’s violet, dame’s gillyflower,
dame’s wort
Yellow flag iris
Iris pseudacorus
Moneywort
Lysimachia nummularia Creeping Jenny or Charlie, wandering sailor
Purple loosestrife
Lythrum salicaria
Star-of-Bethlehem
Bethlehem
Ornithogalum nutans/ umbellatum Silver bells, drooping star-of
Wild parsnip
Pastinaca sativa
Beefsteak plant
Swamp loosestrife
Garden parsnip
Perilla frutescens
Chinese basil, purple mint
Bristled knotweed
smartweed
Persicaria longiseta
Oriental lady’s thumb, Asiatic
Lesser celandine
Ranunculus ficaria
Fig buttercup, pilewort
Vines
COMMON NAME
SCIENTIFIC NAME
OTHER COMMON NAMES
Chocolate Vine
Akebia quinata
Fiveleaf akebia, raisin vine
Porcelain berry
Ampelopsis brevipedunculata
Amur peppervine, porcelain vine
Oriental bittersweet
Celastrus orbiculatus
Asiatic or round-leaved bittersweet
Japanese hops
Humulus japonicas
Wintercreeper
Euonymus fortune
Climbing euonymus, fortune’s spindle
English ivy
Hedera helix
Common ivy
Japanese honeysuckle
Lonicera japonica
Chinese honeysuckle
Mile-a-minute
Persicaria perfoliata
Devil’s tear-thumb
Kudzu
Pueraria lobata
Vine that ate the South
Black swallow-wort
Vincetoxicum nigrum
Louis’ or Louise’s swallow-wort
Pale swallow-wort
vine
Vincetoxicum rossicum
European swallow-wort, dog strangling
Trees
COMMON NAME
SCIENTIFIC NAME
OTHER COMMON NAMES
Norway maple
Acer platanoides
Sycamore maple
Acer pseudoplatanus
Mock plane
Tree-of-heaven
Ailanthus altissima
Chinese or stinking sumac, tree of hell
10
Mimosa
Albizia julibrissin
Persian silk tree, silktree, silky acacia
European black alder
Alnus glutinosa
Common alder
Japanese angelica tree
Aralia elata
Empress tree
Paulownia tomentosa
Callery pear
Pyrus calleryana
Siberian elm
Ulmus pumila
Princess tree, royal paulownia
Shrubs
COMMON NAME
SCIENTIFIC NAME
OTHER COMMON NAMES
Japanese barberry
Berberis thunbergii
Red barberry, Thunberg’s barberry
European barberry
Berberis vulgaris
Common barberry
Russian olive
Elaeagnus angustifolia
Oleaster, wild olive
Autumn olive
Elaeagnus umbellate
Winged Euonymus
wahoo
Euonymus alata
Glossy buckthorn
Frangula alnus
Shrubby bushclover
Lespedeza bicolor
Shrubby lespedeza
Chinese bushclover
Lespedeza cuneata
Chinese Lespedeza, sericea lespedeza
Japanese privet
Burning bush, winged burning bush, winged
Ligustrum japonicum
Waxleaf ligustrum, wax privet
Border privet
privet
Ligustrum obtusifolium
Chinese privet
Ligustrum sinense
Common privet
Ligustrum vulgare
European privet, wild privet
Amur honeysuckle
Lonicera mackii
Morrow’s honeysuckle
Lonicera morrowii
Bell’s honeysuckle
honeysuckle
Lonicera xbella
Standish honeysuckle
Lonicera standishii
Tartarian honeysuckle
Lonicera tatarica
Common buckthorn
Rhamnus cathartica
Jetbead
Multiflora rose
sisters rose
Wineberry
Blunt-leaved or obtuse-leaved or regal
Bella or showy bush or pretty
Rhodotypos scandens
Purging buckthorn
Black jetbead
Rosa multiflora
Rambler/Japanese or baby or seven-
Rubus phoenicolasius
11
Wine raspberry, Japanese wineberry
Japanese spiraea
spiraea
Spiraea japonica
Japanese meadowsweet, nippon
Guelder rose
cramp bark
Viburnum opulus
Cranberrybush viburnum, red elder,
Aquatic Plants
COMMON NAME
SCIENTIFIC NAME
OTHER COMMON NAMES
Carolina fanwort
grass
Cabomba caroliniana
Green Cabomba, fish grass, Washington
Didymo
Didymoshenia geminate
Brazilian water-weed
Hydrilla
Rock snot
Egeria densa
Hydrilla verticillata
Esthwaite waterweed
Floating seedbox
Ludwigia peploides
Water primrose
Parrot feather watermilfoil
Myriophyllum aquaticum
Parrotfeather
Eurasian water-milfoil
Myriophyllum spicatum
Eurasian milfoil, spike watermilfoil
Curly pondweed
leaved pondweed
Potamogeton crispus
Curly-leaved or curlyleaf or crispy-
Europan water chestnutTrapa natans
Devil pod
Narrow-leaved cattail
Typha angustifolia
Hybrid cattail
Typha x glauca
Narrow lead cattail, nail rod
Grasses
COMMON NAME
SCIENTIFIC NAME
OTHER COMMON NAMES
Poverty brome
Bromus sterilis
Cheatgrass
grass, June grass
Bromus tectorum
Downy or drooping brome, bronco
Japanese stiltgrass
Microstegium vimineum
Nepalese browntop, packing grass
Reed canary grass
Phalaris australis
Common reed
Phragmites australis ssp. australis
Shattercane
Sorghum bicolor ssp. drummondii
Johnson grass
Sorghum halepense
Watch List
These species are on DCNR’s “Watch List”. This means there is reason to believe that these species have
12
the potential to act aggres-sively in certain environments or in surrounding states. They could pose
threats to natural ecosystems if they become invasive.
Amur maple
Acer ginnala
Small carpetgrass
jointhead
Arthraxon hispidus
Paper mulberry
Joint-head grass, hairy joint grass,
Broussonetia papyfera
Butterfly bush
Buddleja davidii
Orange day-lily
Hemerocallis fulva
Velvet grass
Holcus lanatus
Yorkshire fog
Chinese silvergrass
Miscanthus sinensis
Eulalia, zebra grass, maidenhair grass
White mulberry
Orange-eye butterfly bush
Morus alba
Common/Chinese/Russian white mulberry
Wavyleaf basketgrass
Oplismenus hirtellus
Japanese pachysandra
Pachysandra terminalis
Amur corktree
Phellodendron amurense
Japanese corktree
Phellodendron japonicum
Japanese spurge, Chinese fever vine
Lavella corktree
Phellodendron lavellei
Golden bamboo
Phyllostachys aurea
Rough bluegrass
Poa trivialis
Ravenna grass
Saccharum ravennae
Tall fescue
Schedonorus arundinaceus
Bee-bee tree
Tetradium daniellii
Korean Evodia
Linden viburnum
Viburnum dilatatum
Linden arrowwood
Doublefile viburnum
Viburnum plicatum
Japanese snowball bush
Siebold viburnum
Viburnum sieboldii
Siebold’s arrowwod
Bigleaf periwinkle
Vinca major
Greater periwinkle
Common periwinkle
Vinca minor
Ground myrtle
Japanese wisteria
Wisteria floribunda
Chinese wisteria
Wisteria sinensis
Yellow grove bamboo, fish pole bamboo
13
Hardy pampas grass