Late summer and fall can be an excellent time to treat unwanted stands of woody plants. Scattered stands of individual trees should either be treated individually using the basal bark method (for labeled plants less than 4-6 inches in diameter) or the cut stump treatment method. The basal bark and cut stump treatments will not be effective if the plants cannot be treated down to the soil line. Avoid conditions where water (or snow later in the season) prevents spraying to the ground line. Unlike foliar applications, basal bark and cut-stump treatments are less affected by weather.
Basal bark application method
Producers can treat smaller diameter susceptible woody plants individually this fall by spraying the basal stem parts with triclopyr plus diesel fuel or a commercially available basal oil. The lower 12-15 inches of the stems or trunks of susceptible small trees should be thoroughly wetted on all sides with a triclopyr-diesel mixture. Triclopyr goes by the tradenames Remedy Ultra and Pathfinder II. Remedy Ultra is a 4 lb/gallon product. The labeled recommendations for Remedy Ultra are 20-30% solution in diesel. Pathfinder II is a ready-to-use product and does not have to be mixed with diesel. PastureGard HL is a premix of triclopyr and fluroxypyr, and can be applied as a basal bark or cut-stump treatment as a 25% solution in diesel. Crossbow, a mixture of triclopyr and 2,4-D, can also provide control of certain woody plants as a 4% solution in diesel. Milestone, with the active ingredient aminopyralid, is effective on black and common honeylocust. Mix Milestone 5% v/v with a compatible basal oil; e.g. Dyne-Amic from Helena Chemical. Before selecting a basal oil, do a jar test by mixing Milestone and basal oil to determine compatibility.
Cut-stump method
If the woody plant is greater than 6 inches in diameter, the best method is to:
The stump of ash, cottonwood, elm, oaks, persimmon, willow, and Russian olive can be treated with a 1:1 ratio of dicamba (Clarity, Sterling Blue) in water instead of triclopyr if desired. The stumps of Eastern red cedar do not need to be treated since, unlike many woody plants, this species does not root sprout. Simply cutting Eastern red cedar below the lowest green branch will kill it. Common trees in Kansas that re-sprout after cutting include: ash, cottonwood, elm, oaks, osage orange (hedge), persimmon, black and common honey locust, saltcedar, and Russian olive. In sprouting species, new shoots arise from dormant buds at or below the ground often resulting in a multi-stemmed clump.
Figure 1. Treat the cambium tissue for cut-stump treatments.
Table 1. Cut-Stump Herbicides
Herbicide |
Active ingredients per gallon |
Rate |
Crossbow1 |
2 lb 2,4-D + 1 lb triclopyr |
4% in diesel |
Remedy Ultra |
4 lb triclopyr |
20-30% in diesel |
Pathfinder II |
0.75 lb triclopyr |
Ready to use |
PastureGard HL |
3 lb triclopyr + 1 lb fluroxypyr |
25% in diesel |
Milestone |
2 lb aminopyralid |
10% in water |
Sterling Blue/Clarity |
4 lb dicamba |
25-50% in water |
Roundup PowerMAX |
5.5 lb glyphosate |
50-100% in water |
Arsenal |
2 lb imazapyr |
10% in water |
Tordon 22K |
2 lb picloram |
10% in water |
Capstone |
0.1 lb aminopyralid + 1 lb triclopyr amine |
Undiluted |
1 Trade names are used to help identify herbicides. No endorsement is intended, nor is any criticism implied of similar products not mentioned.
Common honeylocust can re-sprout from a wide diameter area around the main plant because of root suckers. One option is to make a basal bark treatment with triclopyr-containing products to kill the entire plant in the fall. Then the main plant can be cut down in subsequent years once the tree is dead. Cut-stump applications of Milestone as a 10% solution in water has been more effective than triclopyr on common honeylocust.
Table 2. Cut-Stump Treatments
Species |
Herbicides |
Ash |
Crossbow, Pathfinder II, Banvel/Clarity, Arsenal, Capstone |
Common honeylocust |
Remedy Ultra, Pathfinder II, PastureGard HL, Milestone, Sterling Blue/Clarity, Tordon 22K, Capstone |
Cottonwood |
Crossbow, Remedy Ultra, Pathfinder II, Sterling Blue/Clarity, Arsenal, Capstone |
Elm |
Crossbow, Remedy Ultra, Pathfinder II, PastureGard HL, Banvel/Clarity, Arsenal, Tordon 22K, Capstone |
Oaks |
Remedy Ultra, Pathfinder II, PastureGard HL, Banvel/Clarity, Roundup PowerMAX, Arsenal, Tordon 22K, Capstone |
Osage orange (hedge) |
Remedy Ultra, Pathfinder II, PastureGard HL |
Persimmon |
Remedy Ultra, Pathfinder II, PastureGard HL, Sterling Blue/Clarity, Arsenal |
Russian olive |
Crossbow, Pathfinder II, Sterling Blue/Clarity, Arsenal |
Salt cedar |
Remedy Ultra, Pathfinder II, PastureGard HL, Roundup PowerMAX, Arsenal |
Willow |
Arsenal, Crossbow, Remedy Ultra, Pathfinder II, PastureGard HL, Roundup PowerMAX, Sterling Blue/Clarity |
Tordon RTU and Pathway can be used on cut surfaces in noncropland areas such as fence rows, roadsides, and rights-of-way. However, Tordon RTU, and Pathway are not labeled for use on range and pasture. Glyphosate labels vary on what sites are labeled for cut-stump application on rangeland. Roundup PowerMAX can be applied on any terrestrial site. Roundup ULTRA can only be applied as a cut-stump treatment on non-cropland. Be sure to check the label as rangeland is sometimes included as a site under non-cropland on some glyphosate labels.
Application equipment for cut-stump application includes pressurized hand sprayers, small backpack sprayers, sprayer mounted on ATV with handheld gun, hydraulic tree shears or saws with an attached spray nozzle, or even a paint brush. Two of the more common pieces of equipment for cutting the woody plants are the turbo saw and the hydra clip (Figure 2).
Figure 2. Turbo saw (left) and hydra clip (right).
Although exposure to animals is reduced by basal and cut-stump treatments, grazing and haying restrictions still need to be followed. There are no restrictions before grazing with any of the herbicides discussed. Check labels for restrictions for use prior to hay harvesting, removal of animals before slaughter, and for use around lactating dairy animals.
Application tips for using cut-stump treatments:
Walt Fick, Rangeland Management Specialist
whfick@ksu.edu
Tags: herbicide woody plants rangeland