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Tomatoes 2008
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Invasive Plants to Avoid Institutions of higher learning in our country are sometimes described as “ivory towers” the columns that English ivy, Hedera helix, makes when it scales buildings or forest trees. English ivy is frequently used in home and commercial landscapes as a ground cover, primarily in shady situations. It is a vigorous grower, with few insect, disease or cultural problems, and for the first few years can be a low-maintenance plant. Easy to propagate, it is a relatively inexpensive ground cover. The problem is that, without annual pruning, English ivy outgrows its original planting area, and climbs, attaching to trees, buildings, or anything else. Because it attaches to buildings by the use of “holdfast” roots, it can cause damage to tree bark, wood and masonry, a maintenance problem well known to property owners with ivy plantings. Even when it stays on the ground, English ivy can outgrow the bounds of the garden where it was originally planted, and grow into neighboring properties, including woodlands. This happens frequently in woodland buffer areas. English ivy is a woody vine with dark green three- to five-lobed leaves, with heart-shaped bases and lighter colored veins. The form that we are most familiar with is sexually immature; it does not flower and seed. When allowed to climb and with sufficient light, however, it becomes sexually mature. The leaves take on a more triangular or egg-like shape, and the plants produce clusters of small greenish white flowers in the fall and then black fleshy berries with one or more hard seeds in the spring. The berries are eaten by birds, and the seed spread in bird droppings, and the plant is thus easily moved into areas where it was never intended to be planted. English ivy is also spread in improperly disposed of garden debris – it roots very easily from pruned pieces discarded at the side of the road. Introduced into this country by colonists from Eurasia, English ivy today is widely sold as an ornamental plant. It inhabits not only gardens, but hedgerows, woodlands, coastal areas, salt marsh and field edges. It is extremely competitive, even in shady areas, although it does not do well in very wet conditions. Once the ivy escapes gardens and grows into parklands and natural areas, it
causes several types of damage. Control Techniques In most situations, wholesale, non-selective methods, such as spraying with an herbicide, should be avoided. Non-selective methods often result in the removal of desirable woodland species that may persist in the understory, like viburnums, blueberries or ferns. If possible, remove English ivy by hand. The first step is to cut, near ground level, all the vines that are climbing trees. This will prevent further fruiting and seed dispersal, and will unburden the trees. It is not necessary to pull the vines from the trees, in fact, this may often do more harm than good. The next step is to cut the ivy roots and to roll the mass of ivy vegetation as the roots are cut, much like rolling up a giant carpet. This is hard, dirty work, and it helps to have two or more people engaged in the process, but it is not as enormous a task as it may seem. Step three of the process is to help native plants recolonize the woodland understory. This is crucial, because nature abhors a vacuum, and removal of the ivy disturbs the soil, creating an opportunity for colonization by other, aggressive, potentially more troublesome, invasive plants, such as Japanese stilt grass, Garlic mustard, Multiflora rose, or Japanese honeysuckle. The likelihood of simply swapping one invasive plant species for another means that natural area managers (including homeowners with woods on their properties) must be especially careful when attempting remediation of woodlands infested with English ivy. Often small bare root native woody plants are available for a relatively low cost per plant. Seed mixes of native woodland wildflowers are also available, and can be broadcast throughout the area where ivy has been removed. No English ivy removal project is complete without follow-up monitoring. The final, and ongoing, step is to vigilantly scout for and remove any invasive plants (including ivy missed in the removal process) in the replanted area. As long as unmaintained English ivy is planted in gardens adjacent to natural areas, there will always be the potential for reinvasion. Alternative Plantings
Dirty Dozen Invaders of the SouthwestFor Ornamental Invaders or for Rangeland Invaders
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