How to Control Japanese Knotweed

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  • Опубліковано 23 вер 2024
  • With an academic background in biology, environmental forestry and eco-physiology, Dr Paul Beckett shares his expertise in Japanese Knotweed - its life-cycle, different methods of managing it, plus the legalities of it being a `controlled waste`. In collaboration with Professor Anthony Moore of the University of Sussex and Julia Shearman, a PhD student funded by the Biotechnology and Biological Science Research Council, he is looking at new ways to inhibit the rapid growth of this invasive plant.
    www.phlorum.com
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    www.bbsrc.ac.uk
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 110

  • @godswat-chn9331
    @godswat-chn9331 4 роки тому +35

    Content doesn't match the title. Video should be retitled, "How Japanese Knotweed is invasive."

  • @The5upermann1
    @The5upermann1 4 роки тому +25

    This plant is very invasive. It is all over the town I live in. I had a lot of it in the corner of my yard next to a fence. I accidentally got rid of it about fifteen years ago. Here is what happened. I had been away for a couple weeks and the grass in my lawn had grown really tall. So I bought myself a brand new lawn mower with a bagger attachment to mow my lawn. I mowed with my new mower and I kept dumping the grass clipping in the corner of the lawn where the knotweed grew. I only put the grass clipping there because this area of my lawn was unusable with the knotweed. Anyway I ended up with this huge pile of grass clipping on top of the knotweed. After a few days I noticed the huge grass pile was starting to generate heat as it was turning into compost. So I removed the compost grass pile from my yard and the knotweed never grew back! I don't know if it was due to the heat or something about the compost pile. I just thought I would share this as I haven't seen anyone else do this. My yard is still mostly free of the knotweed, but unfortunately my neighbor still has it in their yard on the other side of the fence.

    • @SpencerOilChangeLOL
      @SpencerOilChangeLOL 3 роки тому

      I might try it

    • @The5upermann1
      @The5upermann1 3 роки тому +5

      @@SpencerOilChangeLOL It was a large pile of grass clippings about three feet tall. I left it there for a few days and then I noticed steam was coming off the top of the grass pile. The grass clipping was composting and heated up. That was why I moved the pile out of my yard. I think it heated up the ground and cooked the roots of the knotweed.

    • @fuzzheadtf
      @fuzzheadtf 3 роки тому +2

      I've got a section of knotweed about 50mx100m, wish I had enough grass to smother it all

    • @kipstrange1973
      @kipstrange1973 2 роки тому +2

      Fire kills everything, but only if you go back every two weeks with the blowtorch. That's what i do on my vegetable patch..

  • @kipstrange1973
    @kipstrange1973 2 роки тому +6

    Any updates on this, did they find anything to inhibit battery cell expansion?

  • @CompetentSalesUSA
    @CompetentSalesUSA 5 років тому +14

    Roundup injected into the hollow stem is effective in controlling Knotweed.

  • @DXCommanderHQ
    @DXCommanderHQ 2 роки тому +1

    Very fine production. Thanks.

  • @PeterAgnieszkaNelson
    @PeterAgnieszkaNelson 9 років тому +4

    Thank you to these nice Intelligent People, I really enjoyed this

  • @MoniDas-rz8do
    @MoniDas-rz8do Рік тому +1

    Thanks for the informative video. I appreciate your work.

  • @TimTea1
    @TimTea1 9 років тому +5

    I really enjoyed this, thank you.

  • @mariellekaifer8589
    @mariellekaifer8589 4 роки тому +1

    Thank you. It’s so invasive and any information about control is valuable.

  • @mikede2331
    @mikede2331 Рік тому +2

    What about watering it with a super low or high Ph water. could that kill it?

  • @GreenShoots
    @GreenShoots 4 роки тому +7

    Thank you for the thoughtful video. In North America, we are way behind you in awareness of the problem with invasive knotweeds. Regrettably, we may be ahead of you in creating more virulent hybrid species of knotweed from the four widely recognized species over here. We have had the best luck with successive applications of herbicide in the fall. This first shot is very successful at killing most of the underground rhizome. Thereafter, we use targeted applications of a different herbicide and mechanical removal to deal with the stragglers. It seems after the first shock of herbicide, the colony goes into semi-dormancy. I wonder whether that can be attributed to the plant's origins in Japan where it had to survive periods of heightened volcanic activity.

    • @cejanuary9378
      @cejanuary9378 3 роки тому

      Do you have a link to the recommended treatment plan (with type of herbicides) that you mention?

    • @bitTorrenter
      @bitTorrenter 4 місяці тому

      ​​@@cejanuary9378 I've heard through another video on YT that herbicides such as Icade and Grazon Pro are used in treatment of JP Knotweed.

    • @cejanuary9378
      @cejanuary9378 4 місяці тому

      @@bitTorrenter I ended up using 40% glysophate injected in the stems. After doing this for 3 years it is mostly gone.

  • @karunald
    @karunald 6 років тому +7

    I see no instruct on methods to get rid of it.

    • @k-pax532
      @k-pax532 5 років тому +2

      same here, that's what I watched it for !

    • @jeremymcadams7743
      @jeremymcadams7743 5 років тому +2

      Glyphosate foam has been effective but if you are against herbicides then there will be no easy control. Mechanical will be your only option. But you can eat the leaves and maybe grind the stalks and turn that into compost/burn it.

  • @xphilli
    @xphilli Рік тому +2

    I still remember on a uni field trip near Juniper Hall fsc, my professor tried to pull out one of these large bushes by a small stream as an example and after about a minute, he realised all he had done was break off many tiny bits that floated away, thereby making it a lot worse! No one had the heart to tell him what was happening behind him as he furiously tore away at the plants stems and roots. Oops!

  • @riverhuntingdon6659
    @riverhuntingdon6659 8 років тому +5

    Nasty stuff, I once discovered a whole load of household waste and garden rubbish dumped at a friend's wood. In all this was some of this Japanese Knotweed. I know what a problem it is from my days on the railway, it'd even try and undermine tracks, grow up through seemingly impermeable tarmac, etc ! The only thing I could think to do was to burn it. Completely. Thankfully, touch wood, thus far, no sign of any growth. Just as well as the immediate area contains SSSIs.

  • @devbruhlstone5585
    @devbruhlstone5585 3 роки тому +5

    I got rid of most of mine by cutting it down to the soil, getting huge vinyl mesh tarps (my source was free, from riggers who remove giant building wrap billboard ads) then putting 2" of earth or mulch on top to smother it. Some people use old carpeting. The bigger the better, they find any seams.

    • @wannabee8972
      @wannabee8972 3 роки тому +5

      Didn't it come back after that? Considering it spreads underground by those cursed roots, hasn't it managed to shoot out, beyond your cover?
      If you could add some details as to how much beyond the last plant you've covered and such, that'd help a lot of people, myself included. Also, how long ago did you do this?
      Thanks for your input, it gives some hope.

  • @AB-tc9hh
    @AB-tc9hh 9 років тому +1

    Great video, v informative.

  • @diggadee7889
    @diggadee7889 3 роки тому +3

    A thunder bolt usually kills any trees .
    Why not use electricity to kill this plant.

  • @FrankEdavidson
    @FrankEdavidson 5 років тому +1

    5 years on any negative effects from eating it?

    • @stumpy666davies
      @stumpy666davies 5 років тому +5

      I've been eating the stuff since I was about 4 or 5 year old, here in South Wales, I'm 32 now, tastes delicious, raw green and red fat stem, snap it off part way up, inside there is a refreshing liquid that I've both drunk and used as a cooling liquid on my brow, then munched on the stem only about a cm, or like rhubarb it'll give me a sore stomach, but gives me a great energy boost, just from that small amount, but no, no adverse effects from eating it, although I've never eaten in large quantities, I'm missing eating it, but we're now in the process of treating it, and I really don't wanna eat and be poisoned by Glyphosate, 2,4-D or Triclopyr 😊

    • @alpachino468
      @alpachino468 4 роки тому +8

      Yeah, eventually, it'll burst out of your gut and out of every orifice...

    • @excluyousivite
      @excluyousivite 2 роки тому

      @@alpachino468 LOL. Poltergeist

    • @gomey70
      @gomey70 Рік тому +1

      @@alpachino468 lol he'll turn into a triffid.

  • @glennrice1595
    @glennrice1595 3 роки тому +4

    Litigation, enforcement action or prosecution? For something that you have no existing solution to?
    Classic.
    Aside from that, very informative about the problem and the method of propagation and spread.
    I wish you luck, but hope that your eventual cure won't be worse than the problem.

  • @omaramoodi3057
    @omaramoodi3057 2 місяці тому

    Apparently this plant a very versatile and healthy food source.
    In other videos people R just eating it raw.

  • @doransignal
    @doransignal 3 роки тому +1

    how can i get rid of it?

    • @marcbruton22
      @marcbruton22 2 роки тому +1

      Glyphosate, roundup

    • @58DELLA
      @58DELLA 2 роки тому +1

      I'm late with this info but maybe it will still help. I'm in massachusetts, and HAD a thick patch of knotweed 15 x 120 feet and at least 6 feet high. I sprayed it with Compare n Save 41% Glyphosate . 2 to 4 ounces mixed with 1 gallon warm water. spray in august when plants have flowers. the stem will take the poison down to the rhizome. spray again in the fall. 2nd year about 30% of the plants will grow back. spray again when they flower and again in the fall. I'm on my 3rd year now and 12 stunted plants are all that's left, will spray them this fall. let them die on their own, do not dig them up you'll spread them everywhere. this video is ridiculous, they're treating these plants as if they are radioactive. Compare n Save 41% Glyphosate in 2.5 gallon jug is around $100 on line. that's all you need.

  • @Kirinketsu_
    @Kirinketsu_ 4 роки тому

    I have heard people call this stuff milkweed for years and I always knew it wasn't but couldn't figure out what it was called until today. I hate this stuff every year it grows all down my creek bank I have tried everything to remove it and I think I am going to buy something like a Guandao and go to town on it.

    • @bernardthompson1888
      @bernardthompson1888 4 роки тому +1

      Don'y do that, it will make it spread more. Either drill into the second section from the ground up and inject herbicide or spray. Do both in the autumn (Aug/Sep) when the plant is storing sugars into its roots. Of course be careful not to allow the herbicide to enter any water courses and wear the correct PPE as it is very dangerous stuff.

  • @victoryfirst2878
    @victoryfirst2878 2 місяці тому +1

    HOW DO THE JAPANESE KEEP THIS IN CHECK ???

  • @TedKidd
    @TedKidd 4 роки тому +1

    10:20 You can eat it, it tastes a little bit like rhubarb

    • @Laura_B__
      @Laura_B__ 3 роки тому +1

      Yes, and if you dig up the roots and make tea from them, it is very high in resveratrol, which is a powerful antioxidant.

  • @jazradcliffe2286
    @jazradcliffe2286 2 роки тому

    Can I grow this in a pot on a slabbed patio? It looks very nice.

  • @SimonSverige
    @SimonSverige 3 роки тому +8

    Glyphosphate works just fine on knotweed. These guys are just sapping the taxpayer for more funding totally unnecessarily.

    • @58DELLA
      @58DELLA 2 роки тому

      you, are correct!

    • @gomey70
      @gomey70 Рік тому +3

      It's very effective at managing it, but it won't kill the rhizome which just stays dormant underground waiting to spring back to life when it gets the chance.

    • @zzzzzzzzzzz3135
      @zzzzzzzzzzz3135 Рік тому +1

      Guess who didn't listen to the video. 😂 Glyphosate kills everything, including plants you want to keep. The scientists are looking for a specific targeted solution.

    • @rubiccube8953
      @rubiccube8953 Рік тому

      Ammonium sulphamate works well on many weeds is it effective on the rhizomes.

    • @bitTorrenter
      @bitTorrenter 4 місяці тому

      ​@@rubiccube8953 Is that true also of Sodium Chlorate?

  • @execrated-bythem1583
    @execrated-bythem1583 4 роки тому +1

    I’m pulling this shit out ! Fuck pesticides ! And I’m burning the stuff.

  • @iliketoast3211
    @iliketoast3211 3 роки тому +1

    put the playback speed on 1.25x if they are speaking a little bit too slow for you

  • @rustyironworks
    @rustyironworks 10 років тому +1

    Are you handled as an obstacle after all?

  • @alpsala
    @alpsala 4 роки тому

    What about fabric? Will JK penetrate fabric I wonder?

    • @GardenUPLandscape
      @GardenUPLandscape 3 роки тому

      JK would decimate fabric. It would either come right through, or it would just lift the fabric and everything on top of it right off the ground.

    • @alpsala
      @alpsala 3 роки тому

      @@GardenUPLandscape i have 4 acres and the fence line is full of polk weed. Is that similar to JK?

    • @GardenUPLandscape
      @GardenUPLandscape 3 роки тому +1

      @@alpsala No, Pokeweed and Japanese Knotweed are very different plants. I'm not familiar with Pokeweed, but a quick Google search tells me it's native to the Eastern and Central US down to the gulf coast. It looks like the plant is very poisonous, and a few berries are enough to kill a child, but it is an important food source for birds who seem to be immune to it's toxicity.
      It's an herbaceous perennial with a long horizontal taproot. It mainly reproduces by seeds though, so my first guess would be frequent mowing should keep it under control.
      I like Penn State's website, it's a very good resource for plant questions like this. Here's their page on Pokeweed, which confirmed my suspicion about mowing it down. extension.psu.edu/common-pokeweed-identification-and-management
      Hope this helps!! :)

    • @alpsala
      @alpsala 3 роки тому +1

      @@GardenUPLandscape thank you.

  • @queenofbeauty
    @queenofbeauty 5 років тому +1

    You all obviously got no where

  • @murrayeaton3955
    @murrayeaton3955 5 років тому +3

    So the answer to "How do you control Japanese knotweed" is you don't know?

    • @jeremymcadams7743
      @jeremymcadams7743 5 років тому +1

      I mean they listed ways to control it. Burning and destroying the rhizomes. Just the financially feasible vs effective doesn't match up yet.

    • @ivelinaminkova2646
      @ivelinaminkova2646 3 роки тому

      They graze it.

  • @richardiredale5639
    @richardiredale5639 9 місяців тому

    Just trying to find knotweed it Lego Fortnite

  • @dougelick8397
    @dougelick8397 5 років тому +3

    But have you found a way to kill it yet??

  • @hakimvlogs6579
    @hakimvlogs6579 3 роки тому

    Video starts at 7:25

  • @SteveStap1
    @SteveStap1 5 років тому +4

    Being from the United States, I find it comical that I am about to send China money for a dried bag of this. it is considered an invasive species here in the US...even though it has highly profound medicinal properties. Sometimes nature screams in the face of our species, but to no avail. So, to China my money will go...Simply because it was cheaper, and in bulk, i suppose they don't have a problem with availability, or invasivity.

    • @nzt29
      @nzt29 3 роки тому +2

      I used a database to find where some was and harvested it. Free is even better than paying. Resveratrol can be expensive!

    • @217razor
      @217razor 3 роки тому +1

      You can come have mine! I cut it done ans bag it for the trash every month. It just keeps coming back

    • @debradaugherty8287
      @debradaugherty8287 2 роки тому

      Knotweed is commonplace in the States. Just go find some and pick it and dry it if you think it is so good for you. You're the one that is being dumb here.

    • @SteveStap1
      @SteveStap1 2 роки тому

      @@debradaugherty8287 if I ever encounter it I would. Indeed. I often harvest and examine plants from where I am located. Where have you seen it? I have spent thousands of dollars even recently for this. The last batch was not very good for 30 dollars. Let me know where you have seen it, I dont mean to come off as rude or arrogant.

  • @redd605
    @redd605 3 роки тому

    Worst plant, that should be extinct for the amount of damage it does

  • @SheSweetLikSugarNSavage
    @SheSweetLikSugarNSavage 4 роки тому +2

    Its crazy. Why are we trying to find a way to destroy it if it has extremely strong medicinal uses and can even be used as a tasty food source. Humans are so weird.

    • @menschmitnamen
      @menschmitnamen 4 роки тому +1

      How much of it did you eat already?

    • @kevinabalo
      @kevinabalo 4 роки тому +1

      You eat it.

    • @KadoTheNorm
      @KadoTheNorm Рік тому +2

      Because it spreads exponentially if left alone. I get that it’s not a garbage plant but that doesn’t mean I want it to out compete my grass and grow through my driveway.

    • @gomey70
      @gomey70 Рік тому +3

      Because when it grows in areas it's not native to, it destroys other plant life and take over. In its native japan, the ecosystem keeps it in check.

    • @KadoTheNorm
      @KadoTheNorm Рік тому

      @@gomey70 seriously, knotweed is known for making monocultures.

  • @PlanetRockJesus
    @PlanetRockJesus 9 років тому +11

    Oh, girl, leave your eyebrows alone, and ditch the hardware!

    • @riverhuntingdon6659
      @riverhuntingdon6659 8 років тому +2

      +PlanetRockJesus When her time comes, they won't know whether to call the local undertaker, or the local junkyard !

    • @PatriciaFreemanNesberg
      @PatriciaFreemanNesberg 6 років тому +28

      Your attempt to reduce this intelligent woman to your petty comments is merely a reflection of your issues.

    • @a.m.242
      @a.m.242 5 років тому +12

      There's nothing wrong with the way she chooses to groom herself. Your comment on the other hand...

    • @f.ence.
      @f.ence. 5 років тому +11

      I'm pretty sure she's allowed to do whatever the fuck she wants.

  • @PatriciaFreemanNesberg
    @PatriciaFreemanNesberg 6 років тому +3

    Thanks for the informative video. I appreciate your work.