Canada Thistle (Cirsium Arvense (L.) Scop.) Dynamics in Young, Postfire Forests in Yellowstone National Park, Northwestern Wyoming

Canada Thistle (Cirsium Arvense (L.) Scop.) Dynamics in Young, Postfire Forests in Yellowstone National Park, Northwestern Wyoming

Author: Brianna R. Schoessow Wright

Publisher:

Published: 2012

Total Pages: 12

ISBN-13:

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Canada thistle (Cirsium arvense (L.) Scop.) is an invasive, non-native plant in many terrestrial systems, often dominating plant communities, particularly in agricultural systems. Its invasion into forest systems is not well understood. Our objectives were to investigate the establishment, persistence, and abundance of C. arvense over a 7-year period following wildfire in a forest system, and to understand environmental factors related to variability in plant community composition. In 2006, we resurveyed 30 sites in young lodgepole pine (Pinus contorta Dougl. ex. Loud. var. latifolia Engelm. ex Wats.) stands that burned during 1988 in Yellowstone National Park, and that had been previously sampled in 1999. C. arvense disappeared from six of nine sites where it was present in 1999, persisting in the remaining three sites; it also established at 4 new sites since 1999. Notably, the relative cover of C. arvense and other non-native plant species decreased during the 7-year period. Important ecosystem measures (plant species diversity and richness, aboveground net primary productivity, and leaf area index) were all higher in sites where C. arvense was present, and its abundance was higher on more fertile substrates and at lower elevations. Plant community composition was strongly influenced by gradients of soil texture and bare ground, rather than the presence or absence of non-native plant species. This project demonstrates the dynamic nature of an invasive species 18 years following a major disturbance, and suggests that intensive management of this species in forested systems is probably unnecessary.


Chemical Control of Cirsium Arvense (L.) Scop. and Sonchus Arvensis L. in Relation to Ecology of Saline Lake-shore Vegetation

Chemical Control of Cirsium Arvense (L.) Scop. and Sonchus Arvensis L. in Relation to Ecology of Saline Lake-shore Vegetation

Author: R. K. Gupta

Publisher:

Published: 1968

Total Pages: 0

ISBN-13:

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In saline areas bordering Miquelon Lake, a water-fowl refuge, it was possible to maintain tall vegetative cover of Cirsium arvense L. Scop. (Canada thistle) and Sonchus arvensis L. (perennial sow thistle) while preventing their flowering and seed dispersal, by means of small dosages of 4-amino-3,5,6-trichloropicolinic acid (picloram) or of 2,4- dichlorophenoxyacetic acid (2,4-D) applied before the thistles flowered. Picloram sprays at a dosage as small as 0.25 oz/A prevented flowering of Canada thistle treated in early bud stage. For comparable results with perennial sow thistle which was somewhat more resistant to small dosages of picloram this treatment had to be applied just prior to the plants' early bud stage. Results comparable to those noted for picloram were achieved with 8 oz/A of 2,4-D. For complete prevention of flowering of both species of thistles treated at late bud stage, picloram at 1.5 oz/A or 2,4-D at 2 lb/A was necessary. However, these higher dosages also caused extensive damage to the vegetative top growth of the thistles. In other experiments with a dense stand of Canada thistle growing on cultivated fertile clay loam soil the objective was to study techniques of eradication of the thistles. Best results were obtained by mowing the weeds at their flowering stage and spraying their regrowth about a month later with 4 oz/A picloram, followed by a second treatment of regrowth with 2 oz/A picloram, after comparable mowing of the sur viving thistles during the following year. This practice was more effective than those where no mowing was included, involving either spraying thistles at flowering stage or spraying half dosage of herbicide at flowering stage and half in the fall. Both with regard to reduction in numbers of new shoots and of their total mass two years after the first treatment, effects of as little as 2 oz/A of picloram were greater than those resulting from use of 2 lb/A 2,4-D ester in any of the pro cedures noted. At Miquelon Lake where Hordeum jubatum L. (foxtail barley) was a dominant native component of the vegetation of the saline experimental areas, Canada thistle and perennial sow thistle top growth and regrowth were eliminated for at least two years duration of observations by single spray treatments with picloram at 4-6 oz/A. These resulted in an increase in cover of the native grass species associated with a decline or disappearance of some of the low-growing native dicotyledonous species present in some plots. 2-Methoxy-3,6-dichlorobenzoic acid (dicamba) applied at 6 to 24 oz/A and 2,4-D ethyl ester at 24 to 96 oz/A were incapable of complete supress- ion of regrowth from roots of treated thistles. Treatments with as little as 1 oz/A of picloram resulted in 907. reduction in stand of the thistles within a year in plots having foxtail barley and other grasses as com petitors able to fill in the cover. Ground sprayer applications of herbicide produced more uniform results than aerial spraying of narrow strips of this tie-infested land. From the agricultural standpoint complete eradication of the thistles would be the simplest procedure in this area where natural plant success ion is towards salt-tolerant grasses. From a wildlife management view point it is difficult to know, whether merely preventing flowering of thistles or removing them altogether would make any important difference insofar as strips of farmland shore line are concerned.


Vegetative Reproduction and the Integrated Management of Canada Thistle

Vegetative Reproduction and the Integrated Management of Canada Thistle

Author: Joanna Katarzyna Sciegienka

Publisher:

Published: 2009

Total Pages: 232

ISBN-13:

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Canada thistle (Cirsium arvense (L.) Scop.) is an aggressive, introduced creeping perennial weed that flourishes in a wide variety of environments. Its deep, creeping root system and colony forming tendencies make it one of the most difficult weeds to control. A strategy that incorporates a better understanding of the biology of Canada thistle into the development of an integrated management plan that includes herbicides and biological control could help reduce the dispersal and impact of this species. The objectives of this work were to: 1) determine how Canada thistle emergence and growth are affected by changes in root size, biomass, burial depth, and soil moisture and 2) compare single and joint impacts of herbicides and biological control agents on Canada thistle growth. Objective 1 was carried out in a greenhouse and in field conditions. To monitor Canada thistle emergence and growth responses, a completely randomized factorial design was used in the greenhouse, and a randomized complete block design was used in the field. Models were developed to predict emergence and growth patterns based on available water, burial depth, and various root metrics. For the exception of available water, the same predictors were used in field conditions to predict Canada thistle emergence and growth. The variables that were manipulated were able to significantly predict the responses measured, and we concluded that available water, root burial depth, and root weight, length, diameter, and volume are indicators of emergence likelihood, emergence time, shoot and root growth, and shoot number. Objective 2 was carried out in greenhouses and field settings. Three herbicides were evaluated with and without insects to determine reduction in Canada thistle root and shoot biomass in the greenhouse. One herbicide was also used at a low rate and evaluated singly and in combination with a stem-boring weevil (Hadroplontus litura (F.)) and a pathogen (Pseudomonas syringae pv. tagetis) to determine effect on Canada thistle response in the greenhouse and field. We failed to reject our null hypothesis of additivity between control agents, and concluded that integrating individual control methods yields greater Canada thistle control than any singular method.