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Meddlesome milfoils: Parrotfeather & Eurasian watermilfoil Vanessa Morgan Center for Lakes and Reservoirs Aquatic Weed Workshop Salem, Oregon April 24, 2014 Overview • • • • • • Haloragaceae (water-milfoil family) Eight genera;±100 species Dicot Annual & perennial herbs Generally monoecious & aquatic Myriophyllum spp. – 30 species worldwide – 14 in North America – 3 non-natives + hybrid(s) in PNW – Some commonly cultivated Overview • • • • • Identification Impacts Habitats & growth habits Reproduction and dispersal Control options – Non-chemical – Chemical Parrot feather (M. aquaticum) Eurasian watermilfoil (M. spicatum) Whorled watermilfoil (M. verticillatum) Andean watermilfoil (M. quitense) V. Morgan, PSU-CLR V. Morgan, PSU-CLR Northern watermilfoil (M. sibiricum) A. Hipp, U of WI-Stevens Point ©2012 Vernon Smith J. Parsons, WA DOE Hybrid watermilfoil (M. spicatum × sibiricum) michiganlakeinfo.com Variable-leaf watermilfoil (M. heterophyllum) V. Morgan, PSU-CLR L.J. Mehrhoff, U of CT, Bugwood.org © 2014 Donald Cameron L.J. Mehrhoff, U of CT, Bugwood.org Milfoil Character Comparison submerged leaves Status in PNW # leaflet pairs leaf size leaves/whorl emergent leaves (bracts) winter buds (turions) Northern watermilfoil (Myriophyllum sibiricum) NATIVE <14 (5-14) < 4 cm long 3 to 5 reduced (1-3 mm long); smaller than flowers yes whorled watermilfoil (Myriophyllum verticillatum) NATIVE <14 (5-14) < 5 cm long 4 to 5 2-10 mm long; deeply pinnately lobed yes Andean watermilfoil (Myriophyllum quitense) NATIVE 5-10 1.5 - 4 cm long 2 to 5 0.5-1 cm long; partially toothed yes 10-15 1.5 - 3.5 cm long 3 to 6 2-5 cm long; 16-18 leaflet pairs stiff, waxy, bright green no > 14 (12-24) 2 - 4 cm long 3 to 6 reduced (1-3 mm long); smaller than flowers no yes ? Parrot feather (M. aquaticum) INVASIVE Eurasian watermilfoil (M. spicatum) INVASIVE Variable-leaf watermilfoil (M. heterophyllum) INVASIVE 5-12 2-4 cm long 4 to 6 0.5 - 3 cm long; larger than flowers; serrated/lobed Hybrid watermilfoil (M. spicatum × sibiricum) INVASIVE 8-19 1.5-4.2 cm long ? ? ID Verification • Multiple samples should be taken prior to any treatment • Morphological samples: CLR, PSU • Genetic verification: Annis Water Resources Institute, Grand Valley State University, MI (Moody & Les 2007) Impacts • Altered habitats – Outcompetes native plants – Hybridization with native milfoil species – Loss of fish spawning areas – Predator-prey relationships • Altered food web dynamics – Loss of native food sources for waterfowl – Reduced phytoplankton • Water quality (temperature, oxygen, pH) • Irrigation – clogging pumps & intakes • Increased mosquito breeding ground • Recreational uses (boating, swimming, fishing) – 1% decrease in recreation = $500K loss in recreation) (Eiswerth et al. 2000). EWM Habitats & Growth • • • • • • • • • Lakes, reservoirs, ponds, rivers, and streams Fresh to brackish water (up to 15 ppt) Depth: (0.5) 1-5 (10) meters pH range: 5.4 to 11 Fine-textured, inorganic sediment Early & rapid spring growth (water temp >15 ͦ C ) Tops out in water < 5 m Autofragmentation in fall/early winter Overwintering root crowns • Fragments – Autofragmentation – Allofragmentation www.brantlakemilfoil.org Reproduction & dispersal (boats, swimmers, control efforts) • Seed (EWM & Hybrids) • Water movement & Waterfowl • Aquaria dumps, boats/trailering, bait buckets Osceola County, Hydrilla Dem. Proj. Rich Miller, PSU-CLR Non-Chemical Control Options Method Description Pros Cons Used in Dredging mechanical sediment removal long-term control expense, non-selective shallow small ponds Drawdown dewatering 4-8 wks effective on certain species environ. impacts, non-selective Small, man-made lakes/ponds Benthic barriers material covers plants effective, long lasting non-selective, small scale, maintenance near docks, launches, small areas Hand cutting/pulling tools or hand pulling selective labor intensive, expensive localized area, rapid response to new infestations Harvesting mechanical cutting & collection removes biomass expensive, sediment disturbance, short term, non-selective heavy infestations with little/no natives Diver dredging vacuum removal of whole plants selective, longerterm, reduced sediment disturb. expensive, slow localized area, rapid response to new/recent infestations Rotovation aquatic cultivator, tills sediments intermediate results sediment disturbance, spread of fragments heavy infestations with little/no natives Biocontrol insects, fish, etc.. selective, longterm expensive, variable results heavy infestations Non-Chemical Control Options Method Est. cost Dredging variable Drawdown variable Benthic barriers Hand cutting/pulling Harvesting $0.40-0.50/sq. ft. variable $2,500-3,000/day $500-1,000/acre Diver dredging $1,500-2,000/day (1/4 to 1 acre/day) Rotovation $1,500-2,000/day Biocontrol Carp - $5-20/fish Milfoil weevils - $1.20/ind. Parrotfeather (M. aquaticum) Eurasian watermilfoil (M. spicatum) ? ? ? ? ? ? ? EWM Chemical Control Options • Whole lake/pond treatments – Goal: eradication of heavy infestations – Systemics (fluridone, 2,4-D, triclopyr) offer excellent control • Partial or spot treatments – Goal: suppress EWM growth, allow native plant recovery – Contact herbicides (endothall, diquat) offer good control Prerequisites for Efficacy • Adequate concentration & contact time – Water exchange & plant biovolume • Proper placement (proximity for uptake) • Optimal season and phenological stage • Appropriate water quality – Turbidity interferes with diquat Application methods • Liquids Clean Lakes, Inc. • Boat-mounted hose for subsurface injections • Foliar sprays Vassios et al. 2014 • Pelletized & granular formulations (slow & quick release) • Boat mounted hopper/spreader to ensure even application * boat speed; rate of delivery from the spreader; swath width University of Florida, IFAS Extention EWM Control cont… • Fluridone (Sonar, Avast!) – Systemic, slow acting (45-90 days) – Selective at low doses, non-selective at higher rates • 8-10 ppb maintained for 10 wks (16-75 ppm recommended label rates) • FasTEST (SePRO) determines concentration & any needed bump treatments Reference to specific tradenames is not intended as an endorsement EWM Control cont… • 2,4-D – Systemic, fast acting; selective treats dicots – Formulations • Granular – butoxy-ethyl-ester – Navigate and Aqua-Kleen; toxic to fish/aquatic inverts – 100-200 lbs/acre • Liquid - dimethylamine salt – DMA*4IVM; – 4 ppm (2.84 gal/acre foot) EWM Control cont… • Triclopyr (Renovate 3 – liquid; Renovate OTF – granular) – Systemic, fast acting – Selective treats dicots; native pondweed species and coontail, rushes and cattails unaffected – Liquid - 0.75 to 2.5 ppm a.e.; sinking agent > 6’ – Granular – 0.5 to 2.5 ppm a.e. Chemical - recent developments • Flumioxazin (Clipper) – Non-selective, liquid contact herbicide – 200-400 ppb submersed – Quick kill – potential dissolved oxygen problems • Bispyribac-sodium (Tradewind) – Non-selective; slow acting, wetable powder – 20-45 ppb, maintained for 60-90 days • Use patterns still developing (EWM) Chemical - recent developments • Long-term exposure, low rates of 2,4-D or triclopyr may provide control for EWM & hybrids (Glomski et al. 2010, Poovey et al. 2007) – Individual hybrid population responses – Impacts to native plants (hybrid milfoil) (Glomski et al. 2010) EWM Chemical Control Options • Whole lake/pond treatments – Goal: eradication of heavy infestations – Systemics (fluridone, 2,4-D, triclopyr) offer excellent control • Partial or spot treatments – Goal: suppress EWM growth, allow native plant recovery – Contact herbicides (endothall, diquat) offer good control EWM Chemical cont… • Contact herbicides – Diquat dibromide (Reward, Weedtrine) • nonselective, liquid contact herbicide • Not for use in turbid waters • 0.5-2.0 gal/surface acre – Endothall (dipotassium salt-Aquathol, Cascade) • nonselective, liquid or granular • spot treatments 3.0-5.0 ppm • Control is temporary – root crowns not killed • Quick kill – potential dissolved oxygen problems Parrotfeather Habitats & Growth Habits • Lakes, ponds, canals, and other slow moving waters • High nutrient inputs • Depth: wet banks to 2 m • pH range: 6.8 to 8 • Temperature:16 to 23 ͦ C • Emergent growth ~ 1’ above water; lateral, branching stolons • Flowers form in spring, no seed production • Submersed leaves senesce in early summer Wersal and Madsen 2011 Parrotfeather Control • Robust rhizomes • Waxy cuticle on emergent leaves, requires wetting agent • Use of contact herbicides (diquat & endothall) of limited use • No single treatment effective – Imazapyr & triclopyr most promising for long-term control Parrot feather – foliar applications • Imazapyr (Habitat, Arsenal) – Inhibits plant-specific enzyme (ALS-inhibitor) – Slow-acting, moderate residual soil activity – 2-4 pints/acre to actively growing emergent foliage • Triclopyr (Renovate 3) – 1.0 to 2.5 ppm a.e/acre – Good to fair canopy knockdown, rapid regrowth • Imazamox (Clearcast) – Slow-acting, impacts 60-120 days – Fair canopy suppression – 1-2 pints/acre Wersal & Madsen 2007 Parrot feather – subsurface • Triclopyr (Renovate Max G, Navitrol DPF) – 1.0 to 2.5 ppm a.e./acre – repeat treatments needed • Endothall (Aquathol K, Aquathol Super K, Cascade) – Whole pond/large area: 2.0-3.0 ppm (1.3-1.9 gal/ac.ft. liquid; 8.8-13.2 lbs/ac.ft granular) – Spot treatments: 3.0-5.0 ppm (1.9-3.2 gal/ac.ft. liquid; 13.222 lbs/ac.ft granular) Considerations • Proper identification & verification • Repeat treatments & continued monitoring • Timing – target plants actively growing and, when possible, when non-target plants are dormant • Consider IPM approach • Upstream/nearby propagule source • Secondary invasion (replacing EWM with curly pondweed?) • Chemical treatments: – Partial treatments – 1/3 to 1/2 of total area – Use restrictions (drinking, livestock, irrigation, swimming) – “The label is the law” Resources • Biology and Control of Aquatic Plants: A Best Management Practices Handbook (http://www.aquatics.org/aerf_handbook.pdf) • PNW Weed Management Handbook (http://pnwhandbooks.org/weed/) • WA Dept. of Ecology, Aquatic Plant Management (http://www.ecy.wa.gov/programs/wq/plants/plantmgmt.html) • Information Center Online (PICOL) Databases (http://picol.cahe.wsu.edu/LabelTolerance.html) References • • • • • • • • Eiswerth, M. E., Donaldson, S. G., & Johnson, W. S. (2000). Potential Environmental Impacts and Economic Damages of Eurasian Watermilfoil (Myriophyllum spicatum) in Western Nevada and Northeastern California 1.Weed Technology, 14(3), 511-518. Glomski, L. M., & Netherland, M. D. (2010). Response of Eurasian and hybrid watermilfoil to low use rates and extended exposures of 2, 4-D and Triclopyr.Journal of Aquatic Plant Management (JAPM), 48, 12. Hofstra, D. E., Champion, P. D., & Dugdale, T. M. (2006). Herbicide trials for the control of parrotsfeather. Journal of Aquatic Plant Management, 44(1), 13-18. Moody, M. L., & Les, D. H. (2007). Geographic distribution and genotypic composition of invasive hybrid watermilfoil (Myriophyllum spicatum× M. sibiricum) populations in North America. Biological invasions, 9(5), 559-570. Patten, K. (2007). Parrotfeather milfoil (Myriophyllum aquaticum) – Assessment of management alternatives. Final Progress report to WA Dept. of Ecology. Poovey, A. G., Slade, J. G., & Netherland, M. D. (2007). Susceptibility of Eurasian watermilfoil (Myriophyllum spicatum) and a milfoil hybrid (M. spicatum x M. sibiricum) to triclopyr and 2, 4-D amine. J. Aquat. Plant Manage, 45, 111-115. Vassios, J. D., Nissen, S. J., Koschnick, T. J., & Heilman, M. A. (2014). Triclopyr Absorption and Translocation by Eurasian Watermilfoil (Myriophyllum spicatum) Following Liquid and Granular Applications. Weed Science, 62(1), 22-28. Wersal, R. M., & Madsen, J. D. (2007). Comparison of imazapyr and imazamox for control of parrotfeather (Myriophyllum aquaticum (Vell.) Verdc.). J. Aquat. Plant Manage, 45, 132-136