As we are coming to the end of stiltgrass season for 2020 I wanted to review what I’ve learned about controlling this invasive species on my Mid-Atlantic property over this year.
Pulling
Pulling Japanese stiltgrass, Microstegium vimineum, is an effective means for
controlling this annual grass, but it is extremely labor intensive. While its primary germination period is
mid-spring it does continue to germinate into summer, particularly if more
openings appear in a previously shaded area.
So you may find that you need to redo areas in late summer that you
thought had been taken care of earlier.
This was the case in a shaded woodland where I thought I did a pretty
good job clearing the stiltgrass at the end of July. When I returned to that place in
mid-September it was in need of more pulling.
Apparently I left enough scraps around that they were able to
regrow. So if you only want to pull
stiltgrass once in a season get every bit out the first time, or wait until
just before it goes to seed, maybe early September (depending on local
conditions) and then pull out all that you can.
Next to my finger you can see the flower stalk that was hidden under the leaf sheath. In sunny locations by early fall there can be one of these at each joint. |
This brings up the topic of how to allocate our most precious resource, time. While I often dive into some of the most thickly infested areas and rip out the biggest plants, it is actually more effective to begin in less densely infested areas and clear them completely. After those areas are clear, move on to thicker areas. The idea is that if an area is totally clear you won’t need to come back to redo it as much. Whereas while you are battling a thick infestation, the lightly infested area is getting worse and then you end up with twice as much heavily infested space.
Here's a small scale example of complete removal of Japanese stiltgrass. Ideally, I won't have to come back again this year and can spend my time elsewhere. |
Lawn
This year I was late on reseeding the lawn. I didn't get out there until early October. I typically use a bow rake to tear our
residual stiltgrass, then overseed with an appropriate cool season turf grass
in mid-September. (We are near the
southern limits of where cool season grasses are preferred.) Overseeding helps to fill in the gaps in the lawn that would otherwise be filled by more stiltgrass. By seeding in fall these cool season grasses
can get established and not be affected when I apply a pre-emergent herbicide
in the spring to kill the stiltgrass. I should have raked out the stiltgrass much earlier, before the seed was ripening.
Herbicides
I’ve had
great success controlling stiltgrass in the lawn using pre-emergent herbicides in
early spring. Most products labelled for pre-emergent use to control crabgrass are effective. I have noticed that the
amount of hairy cress, Cardamine hirsuta, has also been reduced (this is due in
part to mowing at least once in mid-spring to cut off the flowers before they
can set seed.) While the pre-emergent works very well in the lawn, it is not as effective in the
rougher meadow areas.
I have not been using post-emergent herbicides on Japanese stiltgrass, but they do have their place in the arsenal. I found research that indicated that the use of grass selective herbicide can be effective, without causing damage to non-grass species. Fluazifop-p-butyl is a selective post-emergent herbicide that can adequately control M. vimineum with minimal effect on the non-graminoid native plant community (Judge et al. 2005b). Fenoxaprop-p-ethyl, is a selective post-emergent herbicide that provides excellent control of M. vimineum and can maintain or even increase cover and richness of native species post-treatment (Judge et al. 2005a, b, Judge et al. 2008, Pomp et al. 2010, Ward and Mervosh 2012). Fenoxaprop is not effective on sedges or cool season perennial grasses, like red fescue, so that would be a good thing, since there are many sedge species occupying my woods. However there are also many shade tolerant grasses like bottlebrush grass, deer tongue grass and mannagrasses that could be affected. So I would be hesitant to use these useless it was in a very targeted fashion.
Here I used my garden torch to burn away the stiltgrass.
Then I planted some plugs of switch grass, Panicum virgatum.
This year I also used fire to dispose of late season stiltgrass that was full of seed. After realizing just how much seed is contained in a stiltgrass stem, I decided that rather than moving piles of stiltgrass around I would burn what I had in a central location. Fortunately, I live in an area with plenty of space and that allows burning. The key to getting stiltgrass to burn well is to allow it to dry out. I allowed my big piles [photo] of stiltgrass to dry about 2 weeks to get it dry enough to burn rapidly, In all I estimate I had nearly 2 cubic yards of stiltgrass stems plus thatch from where I reseeded. This was reduced to less than 2 cubic feet of smoldering ash. [photo]. When burning remember to follow all local regulations. Don’t burn on windy days, keep the flames under control, and have water on hand to put out any unintended fires and dowse the ashes when done.
These piles of ripe stiltgrass, plus some additional thatch raked out of the lawn, were reduced to a couple of cubic feet of ash. |
Native Competitors
A more exciting aspect of
stiltgrass control is finding native plants to fill in or even resist Japanese switchgrass. Many people, myself included, have noted that
golden ragwort, Packera aurea, is very effective at excluding JSG.
In the woods nearby is a large dense patch of mayapples, Podophylum peltatum, a spring ephemeral. I have noticed that during garlic mustard season (April to June) there is no garlic mustard growing there. This year I also realized that there was not any stiltgrass there either, even though the ground is essentially bare save a few sedges and Virginia creeper, once the mayapple has retired for the summer. I recently saw a post on Facebook where there was a patch of wild ginger, Asarum canadense, that was relatively free of JSG. These two species spread extensively by rhizomes. May there’s something to that?
In early through spring the area circled is covered with mayapples. This dense cover seems to have excluded both garlic mustard and Japanese stiltgrass. |
There are also grasses that maybe useful. River oats, Chasmantheum latifolium, grows in dense stands and I have found stiltgrass only on the outer edges. In the woods the rosy sedge, Carex rosea, has done very well with just a little help from me. In a moist wooded area I noticed that I had an early season grass that excluded the stiltgrass until it went to seed in June. I’m pretty sure it was a species of mannagrass, Glyceria sp. (I keyed it out as American mannagrass, G. grandis, but that is a rare species in Maryland, so I will double check when it blooms again next spring.) In late summer while pulling stiltgrass I came across another patch of grass that had just a very few stiltgrass stems. Currently unidentified, it seems to block the stiltgrass with a dense layer of thatch from a previous season’s growth. This is another one to try to identify come spring.
This small, yet unidentified grass seems to have repelled an invasion of stiltgrass. |
Next Year:
- Continue with the pre-emergent treatments on the lawn and in limited areas in the meadows.
- Focus my efforts in areas to achieve 'complete' removal before moving on to new areas.
- When burning to clear an area have something ready to fill in.
- Identify those grasses and see what else is holding its ground.
Hi!
ReplyDeleteSo we just removed about 500 sf of JSG from a part shade cliffside - rocky with humus-y soil. I've heard that annual rye might be good but am confused about ryegrass vs rye etc. Do you have any thoughts?
Mar, Annual rye grass is used for winter cover and stabilizing bare soil between crops. It dies back just as Japanese stiltgrass is germinating. Winter rye, a perennial species, would do a better job of covering soil and displacing some of the stiltgrass. If you want to stick with native species I would look for cool season grasses that could be seeded in now and get growing before the stiltgrass germinates in early to mid-spring. For partly sunny to shady sites I have used Virginia wild rye, bottlebrush grass and deertongue grass. Also red fescue grows well in shade. Some subspecies of red fescue are native to North America; however seed that is readily available contains a mix of fescue species most are probably not strictly native. These perennial grasses will take a year to really get established so you may need to clear the stiltgass again next year to give the replacements a chance to compete.
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