|
 It may not always pay for
ranchers to use herbicides to kill exotic invasive weeds on the range,
according to a new study. Click the image for more information about
it. |
|

|
Spraying Herbicide on Invasive Weeds Doesn't
Always Pay, Study Shows
By
Don Comis June
30, 2009
It may not always pay for ranchers to use herbicides to kill exotic
invasive weeds such as leafy spurge, according to a 16-year study by the
Agricultural Research Service (ARS) and
colleagues.
Rangeland ecologist
Matt
Rinella at the ARS
Fort
Keogh Livestock and Range Research Laboratory in Miles City, MT, and
colleagues conducted the study. Data they collected 16 years after a one-time
aerial spraying of herbicide showed that the invasive leafy spurge
(Euphorbia esula L) may have ultimately increased due to spraying.
Conversely, several desirable native forbs were still suffering the effects of
spraying 16 years after spraying.
Although the herbicide would have dissipated within a few years, it
seemed to cause a long-term plant community shift.
Any increase in grass production from the herbicide spraying only
lasted a year or two.
The study was done on the N-Bar Ranch in Montana. Each plot was either
grazed and sprayed, grazed but not sprayed, not grazed but sprayed or not
grazed or sprayed. Cattle grazing helped maintain native plant numbers when
herbicide was used.
Cattle grazing can help native forbs thrive because cattle prefer
grasses over forbs, and cattle trample soil, loosening soil for seeds that the
animals inadvertently plant when seeds are caught in their hooves or fur. That
said, when herbicide wasn't used, most native forbs did as well with or without
cattle grazing.
Herbicide caused the native plants Missouri goldenrod and yarrow to
become rarer over the 16-year study period. Barring herbicides, these two
species proved capable of co-existing indefinitely with the exotics.
Four native perennials became rarer in sprayed plots, but only when
grazing was excluded: velvety goldenrod, white prairie aster, vetch, and
prairie sagewort. Herbicide spraying caused no long-term harm to four other
native perennials. Rockjasmine and other plants belonging to the
Androsace spp. group were not affected by the herbicide even initially.
The study suggests that applying herbicides over large areas of land
containing herbicide-sensitive native plants is sometimes ill-advised.
The research was published in the journal Ecological
Applications.
ARS is the principal intramural scientific research agency in the
U.S. Department of
Agriculture.