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Effectiveness and longevity of buffelgrass treatments in sAguaro National Park. Molly Hunter Assistant Research Professor Northern Arizona University, School of Forestry Molly.hunter@nau.edu. Objectives.
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Effectiveness and longevity of buffelgrass treatments in sAguaro National Park Molly Hunter Assistant Research Professor Northern Arizona University, School of Forestry Molly.hunter@nau.edu
Objectives • Assess the effectiveness of different buffelgrass control treatments (i.e. manual pulling, herbicide application) • Determine how buffelgrass treatment effectiveness is impacted by factors such as treatment timing, treatment frequency, and site characteristics
Saguaro National Park • Examined treatments from 2006 – 2010 • Data collected in 2010 • Two types of treatments • Herbicide only • Manual pulling followed by herbicide • Two treatment seasons • Winter (October – May) • Summer (June – September)
Rincon Mountain District Tucson Mountain District
Other variables • Rainfall (total rainfall 1 month prior to treatment) • Aspect (N, S, E, W) • Time since last treatment (months) • Slope (%)
Response variables • Current density (individuals m-2) • Current coverage (m2 – percent cover X patch size) • Percent change in patch size (time of first treatment compared to summer 2010) • Percent change in density • Percent change in coverage
Statistics • Categorical variables • Non-parametric tests (van der Waerden chi square, Wilcoxon test) • Continuous variables • Spearman’s correlation
Results • Change in patch size was lowest when two seasons were skipped • No other variables impacted by treatment regime
Results • Current buffelgrass coverage and density were lower in manual + herbicide treatments compared to herbicide only
Results • Percent change in patch size was lower on south-facing aspects
Results • Current buffelgrass density and coverage were higher on south-facing aspects
Results • Percent slope was negatively correlated with change in patch size (-0.24) and change in density (-0.30) • Percent slope was positively correlated with current density (0.32) and current coverage (0.35)
Results • Rainfall was positively correlated with percent change in coverage (0.27) • Rainfall was negatively correlated with current density (-0.23) and current coverage (-0.20)
Uncertainties • Time since last treatment was not significant, but time frame of study was short • Distance to roads/trails/drainages, soil type, and temperature not assessed • Influence of original patch size, cover and density not assessed
Conclusion • Most plots showed reductions in patch area greater than 90% • Skipping two full treatment seasons (one winter and one summer) may result in less successful control of buffelgrass • Combination treatments may be slightly more effective than herbicide only treatments • Buffelgrass abundance measures were consistently higher on south-facing aspects • Buffelgrass treatments were less effective on steep slopes
Acknowledgements • Dana Backer and Perry Grissom (SNP) • Leigh Perry (UA) • NPS Fuels Reserve Fund