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Extension
Agent Warns Homeowners About the "Grass From Hell"
AUBURN,
Nov. 13---First, there was kudzu, then fire ants. Now, residents
along the Gulf Coast may be up against the mother of all invasive
species: cogongrass.
"We call it the grass from hell," says
Sonya Wood Mahler, a Baldwin County Extension agent actively
involved in efforts to contain the weed’s spread.
Ironically, cogongrass shares much in common with
kudzu and fire ants, the invasive species most commonly associated
with the Deep South.
Like kudzu, cogongrass originated in Japan.
Like imported fire ants, cogongrass was
unintentionally introduced into the Port of Mobile in the 1930’s
when the weeds, used as packing material, were emptied out of
shipping crates and thrown along the edge of the port.
While the grass may have appeared dead, the roots
were still active.
"The rhizomes (roots) in cogongrass are very
prolific," Mahler says. "You can cut them up and they just
multiply like starfish."
And multiply they did. More than 60 years later, the
grass can be seen "as far east as Tallahassee and as far west
as Baton Rouge," Mahler says.
Highway maintenance workers mowing along highways
have unwittingly contributed to the weed’s spread.
That is why Mahler and other experts are urging
highway departments to adopt strict practices to contain the weed’s
spread, such as soaping and washing mowers after exposure to the
weed or designating mowers that can only be used on cogongrass.
Unlike kudzu, which can be removed entirely after
several applications of Roundup, cogongrasses never go away
completely after taking root.
"Cogongrasses spread radially – in a
circle," Mahler says. "I’ve seen instances where a fresh
line of the weeds are growing up just beyond a circle of cogongrass
killed with Roundup only a few weeks earlier."
That, Mahler says, is why homeowners who spot
cogongrass on their landscape should follow a take-no-prisoners
approach to the problem.
"We’re advising them to burn and disk the
infested areas after first spraying the weeds with Roundup,"
Mahler says.
While this may sound drastic enough, this is only
the first step in a process designed to keep the weeds at bay, she
says.
"The following fall, preferably in September,
spray the area with Arsenal, and repeat the process once every year
for the next three years," she says. "Arsenal is soil
active and you’re likely to lose pine trees and oaks in that
immediate area, but just remember that dealing with cogongrass is a
lot like fighting a war that will produce some collateral
damage."
Homeowners, she says, also should take care to soap
and wash mowers that have been exposed to cogongrass before they are
operated in noninfested areas.
Mahler is working with a number of local communities
and businesses to warn residents about the risks associated with
propagating cogongrass and other invasive species.
Through the Invasive Exotic Species program,
operated through the Baldwin County Extension office and the Baldwin
County Forestry Planning Committee, Mahler and other team members
have identified 12 invasive species – the so-called "dirty
dozen" that are wreaking environmental havoc throughout the
coastal region.
Mahler and others involved in the program have held
a number of training sessions for municipal employees in Daphne,
Fairhope and Foley, showing them steps they can follow to reduce the
spread of these plants.
They have also targeted educational efforts to reach
nurseries and commercial landscaping businesses.
Warning people about the problems associated with
cogon grass and other species is a tall order in Baldwin County,
where the population and landscapes are proliferating as fast as
cogongrass. But that hasn’t stopped Mahler and others from doing
what they can to spread the word.
"If you see a tiny patch of cogongrass on your
landscape, you need to do something about it immediately,"
Mahler advises. "Either spray it with Roundup or dig up the
roots."
"You can’t say you’ll get to it next year
because by then it will be too late."
(Source: Sonya
Wood Mahler, Baldwin County Extension Agent, 251-937-7176.)
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