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Spanish broom is able to reproduce from seed in California and it can also stump sprout. Each mature plant is capable of producing thousands of viable seeds each year. Plants in the bean family are known to produce seeds that can germinate many years after falling from the parent plant. Thus it is likely that the areas infested with Spanish broom will need to be monitored for many years after the parent populations are eradicated. ManagementSpanish broom grows in a few places around the Ash Mountain Developed Area in Sequoia National Park. It is also abundant on the flat, cobbled sandbars in the riverbed of the Middle Fork of the Kaweah River. These populations are located just downstream of the boundary of Sequoia National Park, and continue downstream for several miles through the community of Three Rivers. In 2002 park resource management personnel began manual removal of this species from the Sequoia National Park using weed wrenches. Plants that were too large to remove with a weed wrench were cut, and approved glyphosate herbicide was applied to the cut stump to kill the roots. |
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Last Updated
September 17, 2003
Email Contact: Athena Demetry
http://www.nps.gov/seki/snrm/nnp/html/badspju.htm