Vegetative Response of Goldenweeds and Rayless Goldenrod to Simulated Mechanical Control
Author
Mayeux, H. S.Issue Date
1982-11-01Keywords
mechanical controlvegetative responses
Goldenweeds
rayless goldenrod
Simulated
top growth
Isocoma
Isocoma Wrightii
Stem Elongation Rate
treatments
clipping
Metadata
Show full item recordCitation
Mayeux, H. S. (1982). vegetative response of goldenweeds and rayless goldenrod to simulated mechanical control. Journal of Range Management, 35(6), 704-706.Publisher
Society for Range ManagementJournal
Journal of Range ManagementDOI
10.2307/3898243Additional Links
https://rangelands.org/Abstract
Topgrowth was clipped at heights which simulated mechanical disturbance from potted common goldenweed, Drummond's goldenweed, and rayless goldenrod plants in the glasshouse. Resprouting occurred within days after clipping at the soil surface or at heights of 2 to 8 cm, but 50 to 100% of the plants clipped at the soil surface died within 5 to 10 weeks after treatment. No plants survived after topgrowth was removed at 2 cm below the soil surface. Mortality, numbers of adventitious sprouts on survivors, and stem elongation rates of regrowth varied little with species or phenological stage at treatment. Generally, topgrowth was completely replaced during the first growing season after clipping. Mechanical treatments which leave even small portions of rooted stems, such as shredding, roller chopping, or chaining, would not be effective against these undesirable subshrubs. Some control should be possible with blades such as the "stacker rake" which shears stems at ground level. Mechanical practices which sever the woody taproots at a shallow depth (discing or shallow root plowing) appear to be the most promising for control of these subshrubs.Type
textArticle
Language
enISSN
0022-409Xae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.2307/3898243