Knotweed is sprouting and spreading

David Hulse
Posted 8/21/12

NARROWSBURG, NY — If you’ve been along the river’s shore lately, there is a good chance you’ve seen bright red sprouts pushing through the shoreline soil.

It’s a good chance because …

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Knotweed is sprouting and spreading

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NARROWSBURG, NY — If you’ve been along the river’s shore lately, there is a good chance you’ve seen bright red sprouts pushing through the shoreline soil.

It’s a good chance because an invasive weed, Japanese knotweed (Fallopia japonica) has spread widely along the valley and no generally accepted means of controlling its spread exists—at least in this country.

For those who haven’t noticed, knotweed imitates bamboo in some respects, grows in dense clusters along the shoreline and becomes apparent in late summer when it produces attractive white blossoms in large quantities.

Knotweed is a problem, in part, because its dense growth overwhelms native plants, and while its deep rhizome roots spread readily, they do not hold the shoreline together against annual high-water events.

To date, controlling it rivals Egyptian pyramid construction in labor intensity.

The work of controlling knotweed is tiresome but provides considerable job security, National Park Service biologist Jamie Myers said.

Myers said she spoke at the May 1 meeting of the Upper Delaware Council not so much to define the plant, but to provide advice about dealing with it.

While its fleshy stalks can be baked in a cobbler, similar to rhubarb, and it will also produce a serviceable wine, knotweed stalks are really better left to trimming shears and drying containers. It needs to be carefully disposed of because it reproduces so readily. “Pieces of the plant as small as your fingernail can reproduce,” Myers said.

Its roots won’t hold soil against flooding, but they are carried off during flooding, further spreading the plant.

Chemical controls are available, but involve expensive injection tools to treat individual stalks.

Knotweed can also be controlled by covering it with plastic sheeting, but up to two years of covering is recommended.

For now, Myers said repeated and careful cutting during its growth season is the recommended control measure. Cuttings need to be dried away from soil before disposal or burning.

UDC Chair Andrew Boyar said the Town of Highland has apparently had success in repeated cutting on one section of shoreline in the town.

There may be better biological methods on the horizon. Myers said the British have been successful in controlling knotweed with a species of plant lice. The U.S. Agriculture Department has not approved introduction of the insect into the U.S. Myers called the lice control “a glimmer of hope.”

For more, visit www.cabi.org/isc/datasheet/23875.

No show, no money

In other business, in an effort to make township attendance more regular, the council approved a resolution allowing UDC to withhold the $100 monthly stipend for any town failing to attend for three consecutive months.

They announced that a pool of $3,000 is available for a pilot program to fund member towns’ applications for river-edge clean-up programs. The NPS formerly funded this along with local police and constables within corridor. Trash pickup funding was cut amid federal budget reductions several years ago.

They approved a letter to New York City’s new Mayor deBlasio seeking the new administration’s cooperation in enacting a protocol for thermal stress reservoir releases to protect upstream fisheries in times of high air temperatures, in which they noted that past requests had been ignored “without even the courtesy of any response.”

They approved a letter of support for the Town of Tusten’s Federal Transportation Alternative Program application, which would provide for a continuous sidewalk surface along Bridge Street and a connecting pedestrian way between two municipal parking lots and various public and tourism-related businesses in Narrowsburg.

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