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Japanese Stilt Grass

Japanese Stilt Grass

ALERT !!

 

You think garlic mustard is bad ?? Just imagine an ANNUAL grass that grows in undisturbed forests, spreads rapidly, blankets the ground and is highly flammable!! Japanese stilt grass came to the eastern U.S. accidentally and has been spreading rapidly into the Midwest. There are now several hundred populations in Illinois and Indiana and it is highly likely to spread to Wisconsin. The only way we can keep it out is to have lots of people looking for it, reporting it and immediately eradicating it.

DESCRIPTION: Stilt grass is weak-stemmed, has a sprawling habit and looks like a miniature bamboo. It grows slowly through the summer months, ultimately reaching heights of 2 to 3 ½ feet. Leaves are pale green, relatively short and wide (1-3 inches long), and have a distinctive silvery stripe down the midrib caused by reflective hairs. Slender stalks of tiny flowers are produced in late summer (August - September). The seeds ripen soon after flowering and the plant dies back completely by late fall. Patches of dried plants burn readily.

Microstegium vimineum

LOOK-ALIKES: Virginia cutgrass (Leersia virginica) looks similar and grows in forested areas. Cutgrass blooms earlier (August), has hairy nodes, and does not have the silvery stripe down the midrib.

BIOLOGY & SPREAD: Stilt grass reproduces exclusively by seed. It also spreads by rooting at stem nodes that touch the ground. Individual plants may produce 100 to 1,000 tiny seeds that fall close to the parent plant. Seed are easily carried further by water or moved in soil on shoes, camping gear and tires. Stilt grass seed remains viable in the soil for five or more years and germinates readily.

CONTROL: This shallow-rooted grass can be pulled up any time in mid to late summer. If flowering has already occurred, bag the plants and remove them from the area. Herbicides may also be used before flowering or to kill germinated seedlings.

This is an ANNUAL weed – producing seed the first year of an infestation. Any suspected population should be accurately identified, reported (and vouchered) and immediately eradicated. Do not allow this plant to go to seed.

 

For more, see: http://www.nps.gov/plants/alien/fact/mivi1.htm and
http://dnr.wi.gov/invasives/fact/japanstgrass.htm

Also see:

NOW IS THE TIME TO TREAT JAPANESE STILTGRASS

Throughout the summer Japanese stiltgrass has been seen growing on road sides, stream banks and bottoms, lawns, ATV trails and any other disturbed land that gets even modest amounts of sunlight. ...