Showing posts with label Lonicera japonica. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lonicera japonica. Show all posts

Friday, January 31, 2025

Dealing with Invasives in the Winter




Fall and winter are good times to use herbicides to control invasives.  At this time it is easier to spot many invasive species because they often hold onto their leaves longer than native species and there is less likelihood of harming native species with any mis-directed herbicide.  However not all invasive species can be treated effectively during this period.  At their January meeting, Blue Ridge Prism, an organization based in Virginia to address the threat of invasive species and to restore native habitats, the topic was about which plants could be treated over the winter months. A recording of that meeting can be found at this link:  January Meeting.  For each species mentioned here there are links to Blue Ridge Prism's  Fact sheets .  These provide lots of information each species including how to identify them and others species that may look similar.

One of the most obvious targets for winter actions are invasive vines growing up trees.  These include  English ivyHedera helix, and winter creeperEuonymus fortunii.  At a minimum, these vines should be cut at the base of the tree and again a few inches to a foot or so up to create a gap.  If possible the lower stump of the vine should be treated with a 50% dilution of a recommended herbicide (e.g., 20% solution of glyphosate) to kill the roots.  This is referred to as the cut stump treatment.  The remaining vines in the tree should be left in place to slowly die.  Attempting removal can damage the tree and/or injure folks on the ground with falling debris.  Be observant when cutting the vines, wintercreeper vines especially are good at hiding in the furrows of the bark of trees. 

This tree has surrendered tp English Ivy.  The added weight
 can cause limbs to break, particularly with
accumulated snow and ice in winter.

These trees have winter creeper euonymus climbing up.  Winter creeper
sends out longer branches than English ivy.  These branches will bear
flowers resulting in the spread of this invasive species. 
Note that both of these vines have been 'deer pruned',
 but doesn't keep them from climbing.


For plants growing along the ground, these evergreen vines can also be treated with foliar sprays in winter, though not with 100% success.  Digging when the ground is soft and moist is quite effective at any time of year.

While not expressly discussed, Japanese honeysuckle, Lonicera japonica, vines cane also be treated in late fall and winter by either cut stump or foliar spray, if leaves are present.

Winter foliar spraying of  Vinca (V. minor and major) was reported to be effective, though personally I have not seen satisfying results.  For small infestations hand pulling is very effective.  I find that using a rake to lift most of the stems followed by using a trowel to get out the rooted plants is pretty effective.  Many folks recommend cutting, mowing or weed whacking first, then, later, hitting the regrowth with a foliar herbicide.  In doing this one must be very careful about killing non-target plants.  (These herbicide treatments are likely to be during a time while desirable plants are actively growing as well.)

There is not much else growing around this patch of Vinca minor
(Periwinkle) in January so careful foliar spraying shouldn't damage other plants.

I do have several areas where vinca has escaped the beds and is moving into forested areas.  Later in February I will try an experiment with foliar spraying alone compared with string trimming + raking followed by a spray with glyphosate.  There are some natives in this area, such as white avens, so I don't want to wait too long before I get started on this.

Fall and winter are good times to treat garlic mustard, Allairia petiolata.  The leafy rosettes of overwintering plants are easy to spot treat with the appropriate herbicide when other plants are still dormant.  Treatments can be done when temperatures are above 40°F.  I've done treatments in November and February-March. In my opinion the treatments later in winter were more effective because the leaf litter had broken down more making the garlic mustard leaves easier to target.  See this link to an earlier blog post about my efforts to eliminate garlic mustard.

Here's some garlic mustard in November,  In a mild winter
 these leaves will remain active all season.  Around March
 they will begin a growth spurt and put up a flowering stalk.


Gill-over-the-ground or creeping Charlie, Glechoma hederacea, can be treated with foliar sprays in early winter before a hard frost, but these would be more effective in early fall while plants are moving nutrients to their roots.  By January  most of the leaves have fallen off so there is no good target for a foliar spray.  Multiple treatments will likely be necessary.  The advantage of winter spraying, again, is that there are few non-target species actively growing at that time.

For Autumn oliveElaeagnus umbellata, NandinaNandina domestica, and Bradford pearPyrus calleryana (fall to early winter), cut stump, hack and spray or basal bark treatments are effective. Autumn olive and Nandina can be treated effectively through the fall and winter. Treatment is not so effective in early spring when sap is flowing upwards.  Bradford pear should be treated earlier, while sap is still flowing downwards to the roots.  Smaller plants can be cut close to the ground and immediately treated with a concentrated herbicide on the stump.  Larger specimens can be treated using basal bark treatments (herbicide in an oil carrier) or hack and squirt.

These autumn olive bushes are in full bloom with their sweetly scented
 flowers seen here in early May.  I eliminated both of these with the
cut stump method using glyphosate.


While some invasive species can be treated throughout the winter months, usually when temperatures are above 40°F, some require treatment in a more specific time period.  Mid-fall to early winter is a time in which sap is flowing from the upper parts down to the roots.  Herbicide treatments at this time will carry the active ingredients to where they will have the greatest effect.  As mentioned above Bradford pear and gill-over-the-ground should be treated earlier.  Tree-of-heaven and Asiatic bittersweet are also in this group.  

Tree-of-heaven, Ailanthus altissima, is best treated in early fall when the sap is following down to the roots using basal bark or hack and squirt methods.  Cutting the this tree down is not an effective means of control.  The response to being cut down is for it to put out many root sprouts, so even treating the stump with herbicide is not going to be effective. 

Italian arumArum italicum, does not have an effective approved herbicide so digging is currently the only effective means of removal.

Lesser CelandineFicaria verna, is a major problem in moist areas, particularly along streams.  These can look like violets when not in bloom.  Digging small infestations can be done all year but care must be taken to remove all the roots, tubers, and bulbils, as well as seeds, if present, to avoid recurrence or spreading of this species.  There is a very narrow window of opportunity (about 2 weeks) for effective foliar treatment with glyphosate.  This is in the March-April time frame shortly after the plants have started to bloom, but before full bloom is achieved.  In wetland areas so you need to use a herbicide approved for those places (e.g., Rodeo®). 

This photo of lesser celandine was taken in mid-April toward
the end of the herbicide application window. 
When not in bloom the leaves do look similar to many violets

Some General Comments

Make sure you can positively identify the target species.  Especially with shrubs.  You could always tag the plant of interest with florescent tape in the winter and come back to it when it's leafed out or in flower to do a positive ID.

If you don't wish to use herbicide treatment, winter is a good time for pull up plants at times when the ground is thawed and moist and plants can be easily removed.  Just be careful not to disperse any seeds associated with the plant that you are removing.

For most plants a form of glyphosate will work.  Check the links for specific guidelines for each species.  In general, I prefer glyphosate as it is not translocated in the soil to other plants and that which reaches the soil is broken down quickly by soil bacteria.  In all cases follow the herbicide label instructions.

Just to throw in my own two cents, I wanted to add two things.  First while there is nothing you can do with Japanese stiltgrass  in winter, early spring (when forsythisas are blooming) is when you can put down preemergent herbicides to help eliminate this from lawns and areas where you are not encouraging growth from seeds.  Check this post for details.

Second, winter is also a good time to treat Japanese barberry using a cut stump treatment.  It can be spotted by the few remaining red berries along the stems.  There is a native barberry but it's quite uncommon.  It differs from Japanese barberry in that it has spines in groups of three along it stem, rather than the singular spines on Japanese barberry.


Thursday, January 26, 2023

Dealing with Invasives in Winter



This is a pretty typical scene when English ivy gets established
in a tree.  This ivy is robbing light from the tree and also weighing
 it down, leading to limb breakage.  Cutting a section of each vine
around the base of this tree will kill all the vine above the cut in a month or so.


Wintercreeper grows up trees with the aid of sticky rootlets. 
Its evergreen foliage shades the host trees as well as
the surrounding area.  In areas with plentiful deer the bottom 4'
 are often stripped of foliage.  The same can be seen with English ivy.     

Winter is a very good time to have an impact on Mid-Atlantic invasive plants.  Many of these still have leaves and are susceptible to herbicide treatments.  It’s also easier to see where plants are (though identification can be trickier). Most native species are dormant during winter so there is less risk of damage from herbicides or from tromping through the landscape.  In can be more comfortable to work in cooler weather.  As long as it is above 45°F, many herbicides are still effective (see below). 

When I look out at unmanaged areas infested with invasive plants I see many opportunities to have a large impact on reducing the spread of many of these species without a lot of effort.  For some species just keeping them from climbing up the tree will have a huge impact on controlling their spread.  OF course complete removal for most of these species will take several years of consistent effort, but just keeping them from climbing trees can limit their spread and be much healthier for your established trees and large shrubs. 

Among the species that need to climb in order to bloom and produce seeds are English ivy, Japanese honeysuckle, winter creeper, and oriental bittersweet.  These vining species produce flowers when they are growing upwards or over the tops of other plants.  You can significantly reduce their seed production by keeping them from growing upwards.  Most simply this can be done by cutting the vines growing into trees and larger shrubs close to ground level.  Applying the appropriate herbicide to the stump will go one step further in eliminating that plant from the landscape.  If you aren’t using herbicide, clear the invasive from a zone around the base of a tree to help slow re-establishment of the invasive vine. 

The bittersweet, wisteria and honeysuckle grow upwards by twining around their hosts.  These vines grow tightly around the trunks and branches of their host plants in effect strangling them.  While English ivy and wintercreeper don’t twine as much (they climb with the help of sticky rootlets growing from the stem) its dense evergreen foliage gets very heavy, especially in winter, and can bring down branches or even whole trees.

Oriental bittersweet can grow vertically by twining around itself. 
Once it finds a suitable host it will continue upward
growing around the host.  I cut this one high last spring so
that I could come back later and treat a fresh cut with herbicide.


This Japanese honeysuckle was cut last season.  You can see
 the damage caused by this tightly twining vine.

The table below summarizes how to treat several of the invasive species in fall and winter.  All this information was taken from the references cited.  For details check out the links to the references for each species.  Before using herbicide read and follow the label directions.  Don’t forget to wear proper protective equipment.  Another important safety practice in dealing with vines is to NOT pull them out of the trees after you cut them.  You risk damaging the tree and yourself.  They will dry up and fall out on their own.

Invasive

Common name

Winter treatments

timing

Reference

Celastrus orbiculatus

Oriental Bittersweet

Cut stump treatment with 20% glyphosate or  trichlopyr.
Digging/pulling partially effective, but plants can regrow from root fragments.

Fall-Winter when temps above 40°F.  

Digging can be done anytime.

Bugwood CO

Lonicera japonica

Japanese honeysuckle

Foliar treatments with glyphosate (0.75-1.5%) effective.  Later in season higher concentrations are more effective.  Use for easily accessible foliage (ground level).

After first frost but before hard frost are very effective.  Mid-winter treatments were less effective.




Bugwood LJ



 

 

Cut stump (25% glyphosate) for climbing honeysuckle vines

Cut stump most effective June-Winter

PRISM

Euonymus fortunei

Wintercreeper euonymus

Cut back climbing vines to prevent flowering and fruiting. 

Small infestations can be dug out, but plants can regenerate from stem fragments.


Anytime, the sooner the better.   Flowers form in summer with ripe fruits in fall on climbing vines. 
Dig plants when soil is soft and easily worked.

Forest Service

 

 

Cut stem treatment with 25% glyphosate for climbing vines.
Foliar spray with glyphosate or triclopyr (2%) for large infestations on ground

When temperatures are above 40°F.  Treat immediately after cutting.
Mid to late fall when other species are dormant.  Best at or above 65°F.

TN Exotic Plant Management Manual

Hedera helix

English ivy

Cut vines growing up trees close to ground and again 1-2’ up.  If possible, treat cut stump with 25% active ingredient glyphosate or triclopyr amine.  

Cut stump method is effective year round.  Herbicide treatment best when temperatures are above 55°F.



Invasive.org

 

 

 

Foliar treatment with these chemicals (2-5%) when temperatures are above 55°F are partially effective. 

Foliar treatments most effective from mid-summer through fall.  Partially effective in winter.  Apply during mild periods (above 55°F) while other plants are dormant.


 

 

 

 

Smaller non-climbing infestations can be manually removed.  Plants can resprout from any remaining roots or vine.

Pulling can be done anytime.  There are fewer competitive plants in winter.

 

Wisteria sp.

Wisteria

Cut vines about 2” from the ground.  Treat with 25% glyphosate or trichlopyr.  Plants will resprout if not treated with herbicide.

Small infestations can be dug out, but resprouting is possible from pieces left behind.

Cut stump treatment can be done anytime that the ground is not frozen. 

Bugwood

NOTE: In most jurisdictions a home owner can apply OTC herbicides to their own properties, but they are restricted from doing so on public lands or on another person’s property.  In most cases a certified pesticide applicator is need to apply herbicides to any property but your own.

Before attacking the invasive species it is important to be able to know which plants are desirable and which are not.  Some species are easy to identify in winter (e.g., English ivy and wintercreeper).  Others like oriental bittersweet, can be difficult to distinguish from their domestic relatives.  Check out this guide from the Delaware Department of Agriculture for help in identifying invasive plant species.  Of course any vine that is threatening the life of a desirable tree or shrub is a candidate for removal.  


This adolescent hickory tree sustained damage from
Japanese honeysuckle a few years back.  The truck is swollen
due to sap being restricted from flowing up the tree.  I'm not sure
if this tree will continue to survive into maturity.

In looking over the nearby woodlands I noticed that most of the native vining species do not spiral tightly around their host.   Deciduous native vines like Virginia creeper and native grapes do not twine so they do not strangle trees, and, since they lose their leaves in the fall they do not add a lot of weight through the winter.  Native vines growing high into trees can reduce the amount of light penetrating the tree canopy.  One of the bigger problems on my property with vines growing up in the canopy is that they join trees together so that when one falls it can damage other trees that are connected through the vines.  An important benefit of these native species is that their berries are an import food source for many birds, poison ivy included.

Catbrier (Smilax sp.), the green stems here, is a native species that twines
loosely on itself as well as on other nearby plants.  While it can
 be a nuisance due to its stiff thorns it plays well with other established plants.

Another group of invasive species that can be attacked in winter are woody shrubs and herbaceous species that are still green and active in the winter months.  These include multiflora rose (Rosa multiflora), wineberry (Rubus phoenicolasius) and garlic mustard (Alliaria petiolata).  Last year I wrote a more detailed post  on how to deal with these species in the winter. 

As an update to that post, I did test whether burning the crowns of wineberry with a garden torch was sufficient to kill it.  In most cases the answer was no.  Most of the crown resprouted later in the spring. Another action took was to  cut back the long arching branches in late summer and fall.  This shoud reduce its spread since it can form roots wherever a branch tip contacts the ground.  The effectiveness of this effort will be difficult for me to measure but I hope to get a sense if there are fewer of these out there.

For a general overview of Mid-Atlantic invasive species see Plant Invaders of  Mid-Atlantic Natural Areas  For detailed instructions on how to treat you should look to nearby state resources or University cooperative extension services.

What else can you do?

Aside from managing your own property there is not a lot an individual can due by themselves or without permission.   There are a number of ways to volunteer to do plant conservation or get involved with removal of invasive species.  I first got started working with native plants by becoming a plant conservation volunteer with what was then the New England Native Plant Society (now the Native Plant Trust).  A number of our projects involved clearing out invasive species from public and some private lands.  We were trained on how to identify our target and how to remove it.

To work on public lands you need training and or supervision.  Contact the public lands supervisor for the areas where you want to help.  Some other places where you can look for opportunities are plant conservation groups and state or regional native plant societies.  In Maryland there are several counties with ‘Weed Warrior’ groups (for example see  Weed Warriors  for Montgomery County).  In Northern Virginia there are the Tree Rescuers.  Also in Virginia there is  Blue Ridge Prism, a group dedicated to removing invasives from the forests of the Blue Ridge Mountains.  The USDA website has some general information including a few specific links to projects around the country.  The Nature Conservancy has a volunteer site that can be searched by location and date.

Wednesday, March 2, 2022

Managing Invasives 2022


This is pretty typical of an 'invaded' tree with
Japanese honeysuckle and oriental bittersweet
 twining among its branches.

We’ve been on our central Maryland property for about 9 years now.  From day one we have been battling a slew of invasive species that were covering the ground and trees through the woodland landscape.  While we still have a ways to go I feel that we have made some good progress.  As I am getting ready to start another season managing the landscape I thought I would organize my plan around actions and timing, rather than looking at one species at a time. 

First 

My first activity for the year will be to treat any visible garlic mustard, Alliaria petiolata, with a 2% glyphosate spray.  I'll do this sometime in the middle of March, when the temperatures  will be above 40°F with no rain for a couple of days. I started doing this 2 years ago and it seems to have helped me get the upper hand.  Prior to that I had  been only been pulling up plants in mid-spring as they grew tall prior to blooming. This link to my post on garlic mustard control options describes winter spraying in more detail and shows some of the desirable native species that may be visible at that time.  It also summarizes control options throughout the year.  The timing is critical as it is before the spring ephemerals, like spring beauties and Dutchman's breeches begin to sprout.  This lowers the chances of harming native species.   

Here you can see what a small garlic mustard, Alliaria petiolata,
looks like in winter.  Indian mock strawberry, Potentilla indica,
is also green through the winter.  Unfortunately, that weed is not
 as sensitive to glyphosate as the garlic mustard. 
See this link for methods to manage it.

Second

Cutting woody invasives and vines and stump treating with 20% glyphosate can be done anytime of the year that the temperatures will be over 40°F for a few days in a row.  Winter is a good time to do this as it is easier to get to the base of many or these plants and there is less chance of getting the herbicide on desirable plants.  Particularly troublesome on my property are multiflora rose, Rosa multiflora, oriental bittersweet, Celastrus orbiculatus, Japanese honeysuckle, Lonicera japonica, and to a lesser extent Autumn olive, Eleagnus umbellata.  An excellent reference for managing invasives in the Mid-Atlantic region is Plant Invaders of Mid-Atlantic Natural Areas

In doing dormant season treatments it is critical to be able to distinguish friend and foe.  Below are some images of multiflora rose and other native species that it might be confused with.  

Here is multiflora rose in the winter.  Some distinguishing features are
its round olive green branches and its curved thorns.  The most
distinctive feature are the fringed stipules at the base of the petiole,
shown in the inset above.  It is the only species with this type of stipule.

 

Most native roses do not have green branches in
winter. Thorn shapes vary.  Here, swamp rose has
straight needle-like thorns.


Cat briar has bright green branches in winter
and it has straight almost pyramidal thorns.


Wild blackberry has smooth red stems in winter
armed with stiff red spines. Older branches
are square with indentions on each face.   


Black raspberry has red canes with somewhat smaller thorns. 
It is distinguished by the white bloom on the older branches 

You can read more about  dormant season treatment of multiflora rose at the link.  This technique is also effective on English ivy, Hedera helix.  Even if you don't use herbicides to treat the cut stumps, cutting vines climbing trees and over shrubs is helpful in controlling the spread of these invasives.  This is because many of these species are only able to bloom on vines that are elevated and/or exposed to plentiful sunlight.

Oriental bittersweet can twine against itself to get
stiffer and climb higher.  I cut these a while back
but left them long so I could easily find them. 
I'll cut them shorter and treat with glyphosate later.


This is typical of the damage that Japanese
 honeysuckle can do to a tree.  This vine can be
 recognized in winter in that it still has leaves and
 the older branches have shaggy bark.  

Third

Around the end of March I will use a brush cutter and mower to cut down last years growth of vines and undesired woody plants in the meadow and woodland edges.  The biggest problem in my meadow is wineberry, Rubus phoenicolasius. In addition to the wineberry there are the aforementioned multiflora rose, autumn olive, and oriental bittersweet.  

Spring mowing and pulling has been pretty effective at reducing wineberry in shady areas. This is a short-lived species and not deeply rooted so it is usually easy to pull up.  Cutting to the ground in spring seems to keep it from blooming, but it is still able to reproduce by it ability to put down roots wherever a branch touches the soil.   It is recommended that mowing/cutting should be done several times each season to be truly effective.  This is particularly true in sunnier areas where the cut plants can rebound quickly.  Oriental bittersweet can also resprout easily after being cut.

Wineberry is easily recognized by its dense
coating of stiff hairs mixed with red spines. 
While formidable in appearance these are
easily crushed with a gloved hand.

I will return about a month later and do a foliar spray on the wineberry sprouts. While burning is not considered an effective option of wineberry control I will test out targeted ‘cooking’ of individual crowns with my garden torch to see if that kills them in place.  (Standard burns do not selectively kill the wineberry, rather it clears out the competition and allows it to grow unhindered.

Fourth

At about the time that the forsythia is beginning to bloom is the time for me to get started on Japanese stiltgrass, Microstegium vinineum, control.  Stiltgrass has definitely been reduced in the lawn by use of a pre-emergent herbicide originally used for crabgrass control.  It should be applied when forsythia are beginning to bloom.  If you want to be more precise you can use a growing degree day tracker geared toward turf management. like GDD Tracker 4.0The product I use contains only dithiopyr (Dimension™) and no added fertilizer.  Most of my lawn is fescue based and not that hungry for added nutrition.  This link lists some other preemergent products that have shown effectiveness against stiltgrass.  I wrote about my year long plan for controlling stiltgrass in this post.  In the woods pulling and weed whacking, particularly in late summer has reduced, but not eliminated the amount of stiltgrass.  As a result of thinning out the stiltgrass, I am seeing more native species filling in such as white avens and Virginia jumpseed.  I am also seeing an increase in perennial grasses (perhaps a Glyceria species) in areas where stiltgrass had dominated. 

In the sunny meadow stiltgrass has been harder to eliminate.  The preemergent has not been as effective on the rougher soil and I am hesitant to use it every year as it may negatively affect the growth of desirable plants from seed.  Summertime pulling and the addition of tough native grasses and forbs is helping to displace the stiltgrass.  Weed whacking close to the soil level in late summer as the stiltgrass is beginning to bloom is effective.  However this will also damage other desirable species.  The best method or methods to use depend on the situation in a given location. 

Rest of Year

Mid-spring is the time when I will be watch for the rapid growth of garlic mustard as it prepares to flower.  Pulling it out and leaving it in the sun to dry is my method of choice at that time.  

Late-July and August are the time for pulling out stiltgrass as it prepares to bloom.

So there appears to be an awful lot to do, but it is encouraging that I have seen some progress.  I realize that I am talking about using a lot of herbicide, but these treatments are targeted on the actual plants and done at a time that has little negative impact on native species.  In this battle I feel it is necessary to properly use all the tools that are available.  Another aspect of invasive species control, is limited resources, especially time.  It is better to do one area really well, then move on to the next, rather than doing a little bit everywhere.

I wish you all good luck as another growing season is upon us!


Monday, November 30, 2020

Treating Garlic Mustard in the Offseason

Late last winter I began testing the effectiveness of spraying garlic mustard, Alliaria petiolata, rosettes with glyphosphate.  Spraying in late fall through winter has the advantage that most native species are dormant at that time.  While I did not have early satisfaction of find a lot of dead garlic mustard plants it did seem as though there were many fewer blooming stalks by mid-spring.  You can read about that in my blog post ‘Fighting Garlic Mustard with Fire? Or Something Else…


Here's a typical patch of garlic mustard as it looks in November.  It is accompanied here
by Japanese honeysuckle, another invasive that can treated at this time.

This fall I am repeating the spraying.  I had to wait until after some sub-freezing temperatures to make sure that the native vegetation was dormant and hence unaffected by the glyphosate spray.  The advantage of spraying in late fall is that there is less risk to the native vegetation, particularly the spring ephemerals, like Dutchman’s breeches and spring beauties.  Another reason to wait until fall is that a large number of garlic mustard seedlings (80-90%) do not survive the first year, as reported by The Nature Conservancy. So by waiting there will be fewer plants to treat and less herbicide used.  The drawback to fall spraying is that the fresher leaf cover on the ground can hide more of the rosettes.  Since I spray the individual rosettes rather than blanket spray I can move the leaves out of the way as I work and can use a lot less herbicide.  You can find a report on the effectiveness of winter spraying in this paper by Frey, et al

Another invasive that can be treated in fall is Japanese honeysuckle, Lonicera japonica.  Here on my zone 6-7 property Japanese honeysuckle does not go completely dormant and is still susceptible to glyphosate spray.  I sprayed a plot that was fairly dense with the honeysuckle this past week.  We’ll see in the spring if it made a difference.

There are a number of other invasive ground covers that are still green now, but according to the literature I found foliar glyphosate is not particularly effective at this time.  Among these are vinca, Vinca minor, creeping Charlie, Glechoma hederacea, and mock strawberry, Potentilla indica.  So despite my desire to be rid of these I did not waste any of my spray on these unwelcomed plants.

By target spraying I can avoid the native species that still have living foliage.  These include some plants with rounded leaves similar to garlic mustard like white avens, violets, and golden ragwort.  Other natives to avoid spraying include sedges and cool season grasses, ferns and any other early spring plants coming up early.

 

Winter rosettes of white avens have whitish veins.  You can see how
it compares to the deeply veined leaves of garlic mustard,
marked with white*'s.

In comparison to garlic mustard,
violet leaves are smooth and somewhat glossy.

Golden ragwort leaves are palmately veined
and are regularly toothed on the margins.

A fall trip through the woods also turns up other invasives with distinctive foliage or berries like winged euonymus, barberry, and Oriental bittersweet.  Small specimens of these can be pulled from the moister fall soil. These can also be treated with 20% solutions of glyphosate using the 'cut and paint method.'

I spotted this burning bush/winged euonymus because it still had foliage on it. 
Others with their namesake bright red foliage were even easier to see and pull.


To control garlic mustard one needs to use a combination of tactics appropriate to the situation and season.  Winter spraying with glyphosate will be easier and more effective than fire.  In the spring, pulling or targeted spraying would be most effective.  And for those plants remaining in the late summer, cutting close to the ground or continued pulling will be in order.

Summary of Garlic Mustard Control Measures

Method

Timing

Pros

Cons

Effectiveness

Fire

Late Fall to Early Spring

Non-toxic.

Difficult to achieve ideal conditions; Need to keep under control.

A good moderately hot fire is effective, but difficult to achieve.

Herbicide Spray

Dormant season

High kill rate; can be targeted; no soil disturbance.

Spraying toxic materials; may affect non-target species.

Dormant season spraying reduces non-target species effects.

Cutting

Summer, after flowering

Non-toxic; cutting at ground level nearly 100% effective; minimal soil disturbance.

Labor intensive; disposal of cut stems/flower stalks; use of weed whacker causes collateral damage.

Very effective when done right.

Pulling

Anytime ground is soft

Non-toxic; very effective as long as most of the root is removed.

Labor intensive; disposal of pulled plants required once flowers are present; soil disturbance.

Very effective.