July-August 2006

Advances in Vegetation Management

Selecting the most cost-effective combination of chemicals and techniques.

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By Dan Rafter

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Blair is currently working on a pilot mapping program in Fayette County, home of Lexington, KY, that started last summer. He and his fellow researchers are mapping where various invasive infestations are located in the county. The hope is that municipal officials will study Blair’s maps to chart out better application techniques when using chemicals to battle roadside vegetation. Blair also hopes that officials can rely on the map to determine where new infestations may spread. For instance, if one corner of the county is heavily infested with Japanese knotweed, the chance is good that without action the invasive may spread to a neighboring section of the county.

“I think of it as the state being proactive instead of reactive,” Blair says. “It’s thinking outside the box a little bit.”

Preventing Problems Before They Start
Blair’s work in Kentucky is far from the only scientific approach researchers are taking toward vegetation management. Dearl Sanders, a professor at Louisiana State University and coordinator for that school’s AgCenter, is right now studying the impact that Hurricanes Katrina and Rita may have had on the spread of invasive species throughout not only the state but across the rest of the country.

This may not seem at first glance like an issue about which officials with departments of transportation or public utilities need to worry. But the spread of invasive species can actually have a direct impact on right-of-way vegetation, Sanders explains.

Photo: Rick Lipcsei
Chipping trees onsite and leaving wood chips behind helps stabilize the ground.

One of the invasive species that may have been spread through the Gulf Coast region following the hurricanes is cogon grass, Sanders says. This is a grass that grows well along areas such as rights of way. Even worse, it’s hard to kill the grass chemically without spraying it with chemicals that will also kill other, more desirable vegetation. The Japanese climbing fern is another invasive that rescue workers and other first-responders to the hurricanes may have spread to other parts of the state and Gulf Coast, Sanders says. This is another species that thrives in rights of way, often growing 40 to 50 feet up along power line poles and signs. “It’s a real nuisance on roadsides,” he notes.

Sanders recently spoke about the spread of invasive species in Washington, DC, in front of land managers from both state and federal agencies as part of National Invasive Weed Awareness Week. His hope was that the members of his audience, alerted to potential problems, would be inspired to take action to prevent invasive species from spreading to their areas.

“We had some pretty good evidence that all of the movement in Louisiana, primarily the rescue and revitalization process that took place after the hurricanes, is operating in an area rife with invasive species,” Sanders says. “There’s a pretty good chance that some of those species were moved out of state.”

This is hardly surprising. Nearly 100,000 people moved short-term into the state shortly after the hurricanes, bringing with them nearly as many vehicles. “They were operating in this coastal zone that is a big pile of debris, mud, and muck,” Sanders says. “The invasive weeds survived the flood quite well. Some of the seeds have been transported back to wherever these vehicles came from. There was no way to clean these vehicles up until they got home. We had no running water.”

Sanders has developed a list of 12 invasive weeds that he believes have been spread out of state in the aftermath of the hurricanes. They include some particularly nasty invasive species that can cause serious problems for right-of-way vegetation management: itchgrass, torpedo grass, and the Bengal dayflower.

The spread of invasive species is a relatively minor problem for the officials of the Gulf Coast regions hit hardest by the hurricanes. “We are still in a recovery and rescue phase in Louisiana,” Sanders says. “This is not the biggest issue we face. I’m just trying to give people a heads-up. This is not my mission. I just want to let them know they have a problem that they may not realize yet.”

New Measures in an Old Fight
Highway departments and public utilities have been battling right-of-way vegetation for decades. Today they have more weapons available in their fight.

Photo: City of Tallahassee
Trees pose the biggest threat to the City of Tallahassse, FL's power lines.

For example, Alamo Industrial based in Sequin, TX, has long provided mechanical tools to help control roadside vegetation. Today, though, those tools are more advanced than ever.

The company’s Buzz Bar is a limb cutter that uses a 26-inch saw blade as opposed to a rotary motor. The company has also introduced a series of flail mowers that provide a finer cut than does a rotary mower. Flail mowers are also safer for operators than are rotary versions.

Part of the impetus behind such advancements is that the public—especially those owners whose properties lie adjacent to rights of way—is demanding that cutting crews handle vegetation management in a sensitive manner that results in aesthetically pleasing work. Utilities and highway departments that want to stay on the good side of the public, always a laudable goal, will do well to listen and to use equipment that produces more visually pleasing cuts.

“The old idea was to cut as much as you possibly could as quickly as you could,” says Ian Burden, executive vice president with Alamo. “That left trees sometimes looking a bit ragged. We have introduced products over the past three to five years that are using saw-blade technology so that the finished appearance of a job is aesthetically much more pleasing for the general public to look at. This was in response to public works directors who had contacted us. They had cleared the road and the public complained to them about the look of the job. Everyone is really being forced to push the technological advantages of equipment and respond to what the public wants in a safe manner.”

Safety, too, has improved over the years, Burden says. Today operators work almost exclusively in tractors with air-conditioned cabs mounted to them, something that has not always been the case. Decibel levels are regulated so as to protect the hearing of operators. Equipment itself goes through several more rounds of testing before being introduced to the market.

Photo: City of Tallahassee
Aerial buckets bring Tallahassee trimming crews to the highest treetops.

Government officials are now more likely to consider other factors besides price when deciding which vegetation-management equipment to purchase. “In the past, governmental agencies seemed more likely to strictly buy equipment on a price basis,” Burden notes. “They were looking for the cheapest they could possibly do. With more sophisticated public works managers, they are looking at the total operating costs. They are taking into account the technological advances that we can offer with our equipment. They realize that those advancements bring them advantages, even if they have to spend a little bit more money up front.”

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More Than One Solution
Controlling erosion is an important matter for Rick Lipcsei, civil project manager for the Georgia Transmission Corp. The corporation, owned by 39 electric cooperatives in Georgia, builds high-power transmission lines. The contractors it hires are often charged with clearing out large swaths of trees and vegetation to make room for these lines.

In doing this work, Lipcsei’s contractors rely on a host of products. They use land-clearing equipment from Shinn Cutter Systems and mowers from Bush Hog. Perhaps the biggest difference, though, in the way contractors handle their land-clearing work now is the amount of attention they place on controlling the erosion that can result when land is stripped of a large amount of its vegetation and trees. Next Page >

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