Saturday, 1 October 2011

Indian Balsam

Impatiens Grandiflora
Considered the worsted invasive weed of all
Brought here by 19th Century gardeners, from various parts of the Himalayan mountains, like so many others of our 'die-hard' invasive weeds.  This one doesn't have deep roots, in fact it is a half hard annual, like it's cousins the Busy Lizzie's, also Impatiens and commonly used as summer bedding plants.  Indian Balsam is fortunately only confined to growing along water courses and on damp ground, however it produces so many seeds, that it soon takes these areas over completely and leaves little or no room at all for the wide variety of native swamp plants, which include a wide variety of Orchids; among many other types of plants, pushed to the edge of extinction, by this monster.  
Indian Balsam often gets to 2 metres in height and it grows just as well under trees as it dose in full sun.

The Environment Agency, here in the UK, consider this plant to be our biggest problem, with regard to invasive weeds.  Simply because of it's ability to spread by seeds and it's ability to re -root, when pulled up, if left in a damp location.  Personally I think it is neck and neck with Rhododendron, but the infamous Japanese Knotweed is considered less of a threat, despite its deep rhizomes, simply because it cannot seed it's self here.
 Exploding Seed Pods
As you can see, from the above picture; there are many big fat seed pods.  The riper they get, the more primed they are to explode.  Just a slight touch of a ripe pod, will cause it to burst open quite violently, casting it's seeds many metres, in all directions.  They occupy most river valleys in the UK, from source to mouth, even up on Dartmoor, they swarm and multiply in the swamps like locusts and they seem to be an unstoppable force, destined to destroy much of our native fauna, and cause a huge reduction in biodiversity, which in turn affects the whole food chain.
Just look at this picture below; a whole swamp, completely taken over by it.  I don't really understand the point in having a nature conservation area, as this is supposed to be; if they just allow plants like this to destroy most of the native plant species.
Control
Any control of this weed, needs to be organised and thorough.  There is little point in removing a bit from one area; because it will simply spread back there again.  It needs to be done one valley at a time, from source to mouth and up every tributary and in every garden, where it resides.

Pulling it up and then taking all the tons of material some where dry, but that would cost a fortune, even in just a small area like here in the Exe Valley; this plant is everywhere.

I have removed bits up on Dartmoor, but it's an up hill struggle, really; I need lots more help.  But great in roads have been made towards the eradication of Rhododendron and Japanese Knotweed, the Environment Agency is aware of the problem, so hopefully it will just be a matter of time before this menace of our waterways is gone forever.

Cotoneaster

 My Granny used to boast, that I told some person in the park, the name of this plant, when I was about 2 or 3 years old.  It's true, I remember it.  But what I didn't know then; was that it is a nasty invasive weed, from India.  We gave them Gorse, which causes them allot of problems.  Gorse in India, is a real nuisance.  They gave us Cotoneaster.

You might think, 'how dose a tropical plant grow here?' you might correctly point out that India has day time temperatures of about 46-degrees C.  Well, allot of India is mountainous and allot has snow in the winter, such as the Himalayas, where many if not most of our particularly nasty invasive weeds come from.  I suppose that after they have survived the tough conditions there, here is very easy for them and then they take over.
When I went to India; the temperature at 4am was 32-degrees C.  I always take a thermometer when I go to the tropics.

There are many different species and variants of this plant + quite a bit of hybridisation.  Wretched people plant it in their wretched gardens.  The birds eat the berries and that is how it spreads far and wide, with hedges and heathland, being the worse affected areas.  It tends to take over whole swathes of land, once it gets a hold, but requires quite allot of sun and dies off once the main sequence trees grow through the scrub, to dominate the canopy.

The plant dose have obvious appeal; it is very easy to grow, will survive just about anything and has berries for much of the latter part of the year.  Most species are evergreen, so it also provides good screening.  But our wildlife, with the exception of birds don't like it, it displaces our own native plants and it makes us just one step closer to an homogenised world, in which just the same few very aggressive and dominating species engulf the whole world.