Field Trials for Herbicide Control of Coral Ardisia (Ardisia crenata) in Natural Areas of North-Central Florida

2011 ◽  
Vol 4 (2) ◽  
pp. 234-238 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jeffrey T. Hutchinson ◽  
Kenneth A. Langeland ◽  
Michael Meisenburg

AbstractCoral ardisia (Ardisia crenata) has been present in Florida for more than 100 yr as an ornamental and has become invasive in hammocks of natural areas. This plant forms dense understory cover, often greater than 90%, which can suppress native plant recruitment and growth. Results from herbicide trials at two sites in Florida indicate that a single foliar treatment applied as a spot application of triclopyr amine, triclopyr ester, glyphosate, imazapic, dicamba, triclopyr amine + imazapic, or triclopyr ester + fluroxypyr reduced Ardisia crenata to less than 13% at 12 mo after treatment (MAT). A single treatment of imazapic (2.4 g ae L−1) or imazapic (2.4 g ae L−1) + triclopyr (10.8 g ae L−1) reduced cover of mature plants to less than 0.5% and seedlings to less than or equal to 4% at 12 MAT. Native plant cover was less than 5% prior to treatment indicating that dense infestations of Ardisia crenata may suppress native vegetation. In the dense infestations of Ardisia crenata observed in this study, nontarget damage was not a concern due to the rarity of native plants. However, applicators should use caution applying triclopyr and imazapic when small shrubs and trees are present in the treatment area. Additional follow-up treatments will be required for control of seedling and possible resprouts at 12 MAT.

2010 ◽  
Vol 19 (4) ◽  
pp. 490 ◽  
Author(s):  
Erich K. Dodson ◽  
David W. Peterson ◽  
Richy J. Harrod

Slope stabilisation treatments like mulching and seeding are used to increase soil cover and reduce runoff and erosion following severe wildfires, but may also retard native vegetation recovery. We evaluated the effects of seeding and fertilisation on the cover and richness of native and exotic plants and on individual plant species following the 2004 Pot Peak wildfire in Washington State, USA. We applied four seeding and three fertilisation treatments to experimental plots at eight burned sites in spring 2005 and surveyed vegetation during the first two growing seasons after fire. Seeding significantly reduced native non-seeded species richness and cover by the second year. Fertilisation increased native plant cover in both years, but did not affect plant species richness. Seeding and fertilisation significantly increased exotic cover, especially when applied in combination. However, exotic cover and richness were low and treatment effects were greatest in the first year. Seeding suppressed several native plant species, especially disturbance-adapted forbs. Fertilisation, in contrast, favoured several native understorey plant species but reduced tree regeneration. Seeding, even with native species, appears to interfere with the natural recovery of native vegetation whereas fertilisation increases total plant cover, primarily by facilitating native vegetation recovery.


Plant Disease ◽  
2001 ◽  
Vol 85 (2) ◽  
pp. 232-232 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. E. Walker ◽  
N. E. El-Gholl ◽  
P. D. Pratt ◽  
T. S. Schubert

Paederia foetida L., commonly referred to as skunk vine, is a native of eastern and southern Asia and was introduced into the United States prior to 1897. By 1916 it was already a troublesome weed in central Florida. It is a fast growing perennial twining vine (up to 7 m) with a woody rootstock adapted to a wide range of light, soil, water, and salt conditions (4). Naturalized in Florida, Georgia, Hawaii, Louisiana, North Carolina, South Carolina, and Texas, it occurs most often in disturbed areas. In Florida, where it is listed by the Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services as a noxious weed, it invades various native plant communities including sandhills, flood plains, and upland mixed forests, where it creates dense canopies leading to injury or death of native vegetation and structural alteration of the native plant community (2,4). Current work underway to find biological control agents for invasive weeds led to the discovery in central Florida of a skunk vine plant with irregular to angular, sunken leaf spots ranging in color from shiny black to dark brown, some with tan centers and dark brown borders. Leaf spots had coalesced in some areas, blighting portions of leaves. Pseudocercospora paederiae (Sawada ex) Goh & Hsieh (1,3) was recovered from these leaf spots. Fruiting was amphigenous (chiefly epiphyllous) with globular or subglobular stromata, formed singly or coalesced, 37.2 μm wide (range = 19.9 to 62.3 μm). Conidia were hyaline to faintly olivaceous, with up to 6 septa, straight to mildly curved, measuring 49.6 μm (range = 18.8 to 72.3 μm) × 4 μm (range = 3 to 5 μm). To confirm Koch's postulates, a healthy, vigorous P. foetida plant in a 12 liter pot was spray-inoculated with 47 ml of a conidial suspension (13,000/ml) of P. paederiae. The plant was covered with a clear plastic bag to create a moist atmosphere and kept at room temperature (25°C) for 3 days after which it was uncovered and moved into a greenhouse. The greenhouse temperature fluctuated between 15°C (nighttime) and 29°C (daytime). Symptoms started appearing after 2 weeks, becoming more prominent by the third and fourth week. The inoculated plant showed irregular to angular dark brown to black leaf spots with dark brown borders. Necrosis along veins was observed and severely infected leaves abscised. The fungus was consistently recovered from inoculated symptomatic leaf tissue. Continued incubation of the plant under greenhouse and outdoor raised bench conditions eventually resulted in the secondary infection and leaf spotting of new foliage. P. paederiae was recovered from these secondary lesions. P. paederiae has been previously reported from Taiwan, China, and Japan. This represents the first report of the pathogen in the Western Hemisphere. Pathogenicity tests suggest possible application as a mycoherbicide. References: (1) C. Chupp. 1953. A Monograph of the Fungus Genus Cercospora. Cornell University Press. Ithaca, New York. (2) G. Gann and D. Gordon. Natural Areas J. 18:169, 1998. (3) W. H. Hsieh and T. K. Goh. 1990. Cercospora and Similar Fungi from Taiwan. Maw Chang Book, Taiwan, Republic of China. (4) K. A. Langeland and K. C. Burks, eds. 1998. Identification & Biology of Non-Native Plants in Florida's Natural Areas. University of Florida Press, Gainesville, FL.


2020 ◽  
Vol 48 (8) ◽  
pp. 2723-2739
Author(s):  
Ayodeji Otufowora ◽  
Yiyang Liu ◽  
Deepthi S. Varma ◽  
Catherine W. Striley ◽  
Linda B. Cottler

2021 ◽  
Vol 68 (1) ◽  
pp. 97-100
Author(s):  
Roberto M. Pereira

Barrier treatment of vegetation using lambda-cyhalothrin has been shown to be effective at reducing adult mosquito populations in the US. However, recent investigations have indicated that standard residual adulticide barrier treatments may be enhanced when combined with an insect growth regulator targeting immature stages that could be transferred to immature habitat by adults contacting treated surfaces. We conducted field trials at residential sites in a subtropical urban environment in north central Florida treating blocks of vegetation with residual sprays of lambda-cyhalothrin (Demand® CS) and pyriproxyfen (Archer®) alone and in combination treatments to determine their efficacy against peridomestic mosquitoes. The combined treatment resulted in consistent approximately 100% reduction in Aedes mosquito eggs for 16 wk post-treatment compared to not significantly lower but more variable reductions at alone treatment sites.


1999 ◽  
Vol 29 (8) ◽  
pp. 1248-1253 ◽  
Author(s):  
H L Gholz ◽  
D N Guerin ◽  
W P Cropper

Phenological observations were used in conjunction with destructive sampling and measurements of plant cover to determine the aboveground seasonal dynamics, annual aboveground net primary production (ANPP), and responses to fertilizer applications of the rhizomatous, perennial, understory species, saw palmetto (Serenoa repens (Bartr.) Small), in a north-central Florida pine ecosystem. Phenology was not significantly affected by the fertilization. Flowering, fruiting, frond initiation, and frond mortality were all highly seasonal, but while flowering was consistent, fruiting occurred in only one of the three seasons studied. Turnover rates of plant biomass averaged 22% per year over the 2 years and treatments, resulting in ANPP values of 11-37 g·m-2 per year, with higher values on fertilized plots, which amounted to 1-3% of overstory ANPP.


Foods ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 10 (4) ◽  
pp. 729
Author(s):  
Rosanna Ginocchio ◽  
Eduardo Muñoz-Carvajal ◽  
Patricia Velásquez ◽  
Ady Giordano ◽  
Gloria Montenegro ◽  
...  

The Mayten tree (Maytenus boaria Mol.), a native plant of Chile that grows under environmentally limiting conditions, was historically harvested to extract an edible oil, and may represent an opportunity to expand current vegetable oil production. Seeds were collected from Mayten trees in north-central Chile, and seed oil was extracted by solvent extraction. The seed oil showed a reddish coloration, with quality parameters similar to those of other vegetable oils. The fatty acid composition revealed high levels of monounsaturated and polyunsaturated fatty acids. Oleic and linoleic acids, which are relevant to the human diet, were well represented in the extracted Mayten tree seed oil. The oil displayed an antioxidant capacity due to the high contents of antioxidant compounds (polyphenols and carotenoids) and may have potential health benefits for diseases associated with oxidative stress.


1980 ◽  
Vol 87 (3-4) ◽  
pp. 337-348 ◽  
Author(s):  
John Sivinski ◽  
Mark Stowe

Spiders and their webs are predictable sources of insect cadavers. A small number of animals regularly exploit this resource, either as kleptoparasites or commensals, depending on whether symbionts compete for the same prey (see Robinson and Robinson, 1977, for more detailed terminology). Among the thieves are specialized spiders (citations in Vollrath 1979a, 1979b), mature male and juvenile spiders (Stowe 1978, citations in Nyffeler and Benz 1980), Hemiptera (Davis and Russell 1969), a hummingbird (takes webbing in addition to small insects, Young 1971), panorpid scorpion-flies (Thornhill 1975), Lepidoptera larvae (Robinson 1978), wasps (Jeanne 1972), damselflies (Vollrath 1977), and a handful of flies (reviews in Knab 1915; Bristowe 1931, 1941; Lindner 1937; Richards 1953; Robinson and Robinson 1977). Only a few of the reports on Diptera kleptoparasites originate from North America (McCook 1889, Frost 1913, Downes and Smith 1969). With a single exception (Downes and Smith 1969), all of the previously described kleptoparasitic flies belong to the Brachycera and Cyclorrhapha. We report here on a surprisingly diverse kleptoparasitic Diptera fauna in north central Florida with a cecidomyiid (Nematocera) as its dominant member.


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