By Logan Bagett on Thursday, April 20th, 2023 in Eastern/Southeast Oregon News More Top Stories
JOHN DAY, PRAIRIE CITY & HINES, OR – (Press release from the Malheur National Forest)
The Malheur National Forest will soon begin invasive plant control on the forest, with work continuing from late April through October. We use an integrated approach for invasive weed control, including herbicide application, manual removal, biological control, prevention, and restoration. This project is a continuation of work started under the 2015 decision for the Malheur Site-Specific Invasive Plants Treatment Project.
Invasive species negatively affect biodiversity, wildlife habitat, animal forage, and streamside vegetation. Invasive plants targeted for treatment include knapweeds, non-native thistles, St. Johnswort, houndstongue, sulphur cinquefoil, toadflaxes, whitetop, perennial pepperweed, and leafy or myrtle spurge. Most herbicide treatments will be spot application to individual invasive plants using backpack or hand sprayers from ATVs or trucks. Some broadcast application is also planned along a subset of roadsides and gravel pits. Herbicides allowed for use include aminopyralid, chlorsulfuron, clopyralid, glyphosate, imazapic, imazapyr, indaziflam, metsulfuron methyl, sethoxydim, sulfometuron methyl, and triclopyr.
Treatment sites are located across the Malheur National Forest and herbicide treatments in high-use areas will be signed at the time of treatment. A blue marker dye that will fade over time will be mixed with herbicides to alert people of where product has been applied. We typically avoid herbicide application in apparent edible and medicinal plant collection areas. Please contact us with your planned collection areas if you would like for us to avoid them or consider other appropriate invasive control strategies.
The following campgrounds will have no herbicide use in 2023: Magone on the Blue Mountain Ranger District, Elk Creek on the Prairie City Ranger District, and Buck Springs on the Emigrant Creek Ranger District. We may still apply herbicide to roads and invasive patches nearby but outside of these campgrounds. The remaining campgrounds will have at least half the campground herbicide-free in a 30-day period.
A map of potential treatment areas is posted on the forest’s website http://www.fs.usda.gov/malheur on the planning page under the quick links.
Partners include Grant Soil and Water Conservation District, Harney County Weed Control, Harney Cooperative Weed Management Area, Burns Paiute Tribe, Monument Soil and Water Conservation District, North Fork John Day Watershed Council, Oregon Department of Agriculture, Rocky Mountain Elk Foundation, private landowners, and permittees. Funding includes appropriated dollars and grant money from Title II projects.
For more specific information on timing and location of herbicide treatments, please contact the forest’s invasive plants specialist: Jessi Brunson at 541-575-3067 or by email at jessica.brunson@usda.gov.
For further information, please contact:
Malheur National Forest, Supervisor Office at (541) 575-3000