Abstract
Weed management and the control of invasive plant species are critical first-year activities and generally must be carried out for several more years until the desired vegetation becomes well established. In fact, many professional practitioners consider weed and invasives control to be the single most important activity on a restoration project site after plant installation. Invasive species control is sometimes the most time-consuming, labor-intensive, and costly component of an ecological restoration project.
Refrences:
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Murphy, Stephen D., Jay Flanagan, Kevin Noll, Dana Wilson, and Bruce Duncan. 2007. “How Incomplete Exotic Species Management Can Make Matters Worse: Experiments in Forest Restoration in Ontario, Canada.” Ecological Restoration 25:85–93.
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© 2014 John Rieger, John Stanley, and Ray Traynor
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Rieger, J., Stanley, J., Traynor, R. (2014). Weed Management and Invasive Species Control. In: Project Planning and Management for Ecological Restoration. The Science and Practice of Ecological Restoration. Island Press, Washington, DC. https://doi.org/10.5822/978-1-61091-566-3_13
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.5822/978-1-61091-566-3_13
Publisher Name: Island Press, Washington, DC
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