Honey mesquite (Prosopis glandulosa Torr.) is a problem plant in much of the southwestern USA because it reduces forage production for livestock, interferes with livestock handling and reduces off-site water yield.Aerial spraying a 1:1 mixture of clopyralid (3,6-dichloro-2-pyridinecarboxylic acid, mono- ethanolamine salt) and triclopyr (3,5,6-trichloro-2-pyridinyloxy- acetic acid, butyoxyethyl ester) at 0.28 kg ae ha1 + 0.28 kg ae ha 1 usually achieves high above-ground (top-kill) and whole plant (root-kill) mortality, but limits multiple-use options of livestock and wildlife production because little mesquite foliage is left to provide screening cover for wildlife.In addition, most surviving plants resprout from basal meristems and will become multistemmed plants.Some managers treat mesquite in strips or blocks, leaving untreated areas for screening cover, but these areas become increasingly non-productive for livestock and wildlife forage.The objective of this study was to evaluate the potential of aerial sprays of clopyralid alone at 0.28 kg ha 1 to convert thickets of mature, multi-stemmed mesquite to savannas by reducing mesquite foliage amount to an intermediate level (by 50-70%), yet preserving apical dominance and limiting basal sprouting.The clopyralid treatment was compared to an untreat- ed control and aerial sprays of 0.28 kg ha 1 clopyralid + 0.28 kg ha1 triclopyr on 2 sites.The clopyralid treatment reduced foliage amount tree 1, canopy area treed, and stand-level mesquite cover by > 57% when compared untreated areas, and 73% of surviving trees maintained apical dominance.Apical dominance was main- tained in > 70% of trees not totally top-killed if at least 20% of the original canopy survived and produced foliage following the spray year.Percent root-kill in the clopyralid-only treatment dif- fered between sites (34 and 10%).The lower root-kill on one site was attributed to rainfall that occurred 2 days before and one day after spraying.The clopyralid+triclopyr treatment reduced foliage on original canopies by > 96% and mesquite cover by 82% on both sites.Root-kill was > 52% on both sites but only 37 % of surviving plants maintained apical dominance.Resultssuggest that clopyralid at 0.28 kg ha 1 may be effective for con- verting mesquite thickets to savanna and may aid in multiple-use management.
Compton Tucker, Martin Brandt, Pierre Hiernaux, Ankit Kariryaa, Kjeld Rasmussen, Jennifer Small, Christian Igel, Florian Reiner, K. A. Melocik, Jesse G. Meyer, Scott Sinno, Eric Urias Romero, Erin Glennie, Yasmin Fitts, August Morin, Jorge Enrique Díaz Pinzón, Devin R. McClain, Paul Morin, Claire Porter, Shane Loeffler, Laurent Kergoat, Hassane Bil‐Assanou Issoufou, Patrice Savadogo, Jean‐Pierre Wigneron,
Discussion(0)
No comments yet. Be the first to comment.