
Washington State Noxious Weed Control Board
Why Is It a Noxious Weed? It is a highly aggressive invasive plant which is extremely difficult to control once established. Kudzu is so aggressive it covers and smothers all other plants in its path, resulting in solid single species stands eliminating native species. How would I identify it?
Invasive Plant: Kudzu - Portland.gov
Kudzu is a fast-growing vine that climbs trees, powerlines, and structures. Kudzu vines will smother a tree—keeping the tree from getting light or causing it break from the weight of the vines. Kudzu is extremely rare in the Portland area. No …
Kudzu (Pueraria montana var. lobata) | Pacific Northwest Pest ...
Remarks Although PNW data are lacking, clopyralid, fosamine, glyphosate, imazapyr, metsulfuron, picloram, sulfometuron, and triclopyr are used for control of kudzu in the Southeastern US.
Kudzu identification and control - King County, Washington
Kudzu is a perennial (plants that have a 2+ year life cycle) trailing vine that can grow up to a foot a day. Their dense stands are identifiable by the thousands of single-colored plants covering everything in their range.
Kudzu - WISC - Washington Invasive Species Council
Kudzu is a perennial, trailing vine that can grow up to 1 foot a day and as long as 98 feet. A single root crown may produce as many as 30 vines, which become hairy and woody and expand out in all directions. Is It Here Yet? No. Kudzu was discovered in …
Kudzu is a highly aggressive, invasive plant that is extremely difficult to control once established. Kudzu is so aggressive it covers and smothers all other plants in its path resulting in solid stands that eliminate native species.
Why is kudzu (Pueria montanta var. lobata) a noxious weed? non-native, aggressive ine covers and smothers all plants and objects in its path. The weight of the vines pulls down trees, power l Where do you find kudzu? • Kudzu is typically found on well-drained, degraded or eroded land. It will also invade acid-soil forests.
Pueraria lobata THREAT: Kudzu, a native of Japan, was introduced to North America in 1876 as an ornamental , and was later promoted for livestock forage and erosion control. It is an extremely aggressive perennial vine.
Kudzu is an aggressive, nonnative vine that currently dominates an estimated 810,000 ha of mesic forest communities in the eastern United States.
Kudzu - lewiscountywa.gov
Kudzu - A perennial trailing or climbing vine. It grows at a very fast rate and can easily take over an area if left unchecked. Leaves: Alternate and compound leaves with three oval shaped leaf sections. Flowers: Flowers bloom from May-June. Purple to reddish purple flowers clustered along a center stem that grows about a foot long.