priorities way out of wack here!!!
extremely stupid to put so much MEDIA attention on this single nonwoody weed (we have 15K of them already)... when you have the WORST PLANT ever introduced to Hawaii ~ Taking Over Upper Puna as we write about this BS!!!!~. that never makes the fauken news!
if you a newbie to invasive species or tropical plants in general..
MICONIA is the #1 MAIN plant to be WORRIED ABOUT Today in this STATE! Period!!! not devilweed found in one selfish malahini infested subdivision..
Miconia is huge and has as many fauken seeds! its tall, grows super fast, has 3 foot leaves and will shade out all other plants making a huge mono forest! its started all along the hwy11 NOW, its doubled in last 2 yrs alone, every block now has it.. and some boneheaded land owners encourage it a bit too!
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Miconia_calvescens
it has Fauked Up many islands in the Pacific, it Has also screwed up Hamakua completely, (even though they used to spend millions per year trying to contain it yrs ago)
Miconia was never really seen in upper Puna pre 2015, NOW its all along Hwy11's sugartowns between Keaau and Volcano... blowing up in the abandoned sugar field invasive areas of Kurtistown, Ohia, Ferndale, Kukui, Pulu, MtView, Glenwood, etc. etc.
Media needs to catch a clue! and so does much of Puna's selfish landowners who dont give a flying ...........
Please GET Educated on ALL invasive Species here... not just the once every few months short story kine bs on the local media...
PRIORITIES!
The REAL threat!!! MICONIA!
Miconia calvescens has become one of the world's most invasive species.
The tree can grow to a height of 15 metres (49 ft) and has very large leaves, each up to 1 metre (3.3 ft) in length.
The sweet fruits are attractive to birds and other animals which disperse the seeds. A young tree with only two flower panicles can produce 200,000 seeds in its first fruiting season.
This heavy seed production and potential for long-distance dispersal help make miconia an invasive threat. The seeds can lie dormant in the soil of the forest for more than 12 years, and whenever a break in the canopy allows sun to shine through to a patch of soil the seeds there undergo germination. Once the plants grow to full height, their enormous leaves shade out all the space below them, preventing any other plant from growing nearby. It also has a shallow root system that facilitates soil erosion.
The Invasive Species Specialist Group list the tree as one of the world's 100 most invasive species in the Global Invasive Species Database.
The seeds are dispersed from gardens into natural forest habitats by fruit-eating birds. Once dispersed into tropical moist forests it takes hold vigorously, invading any spot in the understory that receives patches of sunlight, and becomes a noxious weed.
It is known for being the worst invasive plant in Hawaii, where it is commonly referred to as the "purple plague", and threatens to destroy entire ecosystems. The velvet tree has been known to replace the native understory of Hawaiian mountainous forests. The plant itself has a shallow root system as compared to the native species. This shallower root systems are unable to bind the soil together which has led to landslides in certain regions of Hawaii.
Hawaiian populations of miconia were first discovered in the 1990s, and since the plant's invasive potential was already well-known, control and eradication efforts began immediately. Uprooting and herbicides are used to remove plants, but biological control has not yet met with great success. Teams of volunteers often lead expeditions into the forest to remove miconia plants by hand.
The tree has become an invasive species in Tahiti and a quarter of the rainforest on the island is now made up of miconia stands. For this reason, it is frequently called the "green cancer" on the island.