Principal source: Pacific Islands Ecosystems at Risk, (PIER, 2002) Acacia farnesiana
Compiler: IUCN/SSC Invasive Species Specialist Group (ISSG)
Review: Dr. Hélia Marchante. Escola Superior Agrária de Coimbra Departamento de Ciências Exactas e Ambiente Sector de Biologia e Ecologia, Bencanta. 3040-316 Coimbra Portugal.
Publication date: 2006-03-23
Recommended citation: Global Invasive Species Database (2024) Species profile: Acacia farnesiana. Downloaded from http://iucngisd.org/gisd/species.php?sc=49 on 22-11-2024.
Physical: \"Destroyed by cultivation and grubbing\" (Swarbrick, 1997. In PIER, 2002). Although the aerial portions may be killed by fire, it soon \r\r\nregenerates from basal shoots\"\" (Smith, 1985). Once established, the seedlings grow rapidly and resprout readily following damage or top removal. Acacia \r\r\nfarnesiana sprouts may grow to almost half their original total plant height within 5 months after shredding (Powell et al., 1972). Thus, mechanical top \r\r\nremoval results in only short-term suppression of A. farnesiana (Mutz et al. 1978) and gives the species competitive advantage over associated, slower \r\r\ngrowing woody plants. Almost pure, dense stands of A. farnesiana may develop within two to three growing seasons following brush control methods that \rdisturb the soil.\r\n
Chemical: Probably susceptible to translocated herbicides, including picloram, metsulfuorn-methyl, glyphosate and triclopyr, and possibly 2,4-D applied to the foliage, freshly cut stumps or by stem injection at standard rates.
Also probably susceptible to residual herbicides, including tebuthiuron and hexazinone (Swarbrick, 1997 in PIER, 2002). \"Sensitive to foliar applications of triclopyr at 1 lb/acre and metsulfuron at 0.45 oz/a and to basal bark applications of 2,4-D or triclopyr at 2% in diesel. Drizzle applications were not effective in foliar and basal bark trials at Kihei, Maui, but these trials were confounded by a severe drought\" (Motooka et al. 2002. In PIER, 2002).