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Cogongrass

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Wanted. Dead.

Listen to our Cogongrass Radio PSA (mp3)

State Forestry Agencies Join Forces To Combat Cogongrass (Posted 6/18/2009)

 

Cogongrass (Imperata cylindrica) is an invasive, non-native grass which occurs in the southeastern United States.  A pest in 73 countries and considered to be one to the "Top 10 Worst Weeds in the World", cogongrass affects pine productivity and survival, wildlife habitat, recreation, native plants, fire behavior, site management costs and more.  Cogongrass has several common names, including japgrass, Japanese bloodgrass, Red Baron or speargrass. 

 

This perennial grass from Southeast Asia was introduced into the United States in 1911 near Mobile, Alabama as packing material in a shipment of plants from Japan and into Mississippi as a forage crop before 1920. Later it was introduced into Florida for forage and soil stabilization.  Cogongrass was found to be unsuitable for forage and its ability to rapidly spread and displace desirable vegetation outweighed any soil erosion control considerations. Although the transport of this plant into and throughout the United States is prohibited by federal law, cogongrass continues to spread throughout the southeast gulf coast threatening forests, rangelands, natural areas, roadsides and residential areas.

 

Cogongrass is currently documented in 62 of the 82 counties in Mississippi and has become a serious problem for land managers in the southern part of the state. (See map - Distribution - Mississippi below).  To report a sighting of this invasive grass, call Mississippi Department of Agriculture and Commerce - Bureau of Plant Industry at (662) 325-3390.

(Click on thumbnail to enlarge picture)
 

Distribution

United States

Distribution Map Legend

(Map Source: USDA Natural Resource Conservation Service Plants Database. Click to enlarge picture)

 

Mississippi

Mississippi counties with significant levels of cogongrass infestation.

 

(Map Source:  Mississippi Department of Agriculture and Commerce. Click to enlarge picture).

 

Cogongrass Links

For more information on Cogongrass, contact:

 

Randy Chapin

District Forester, Southwest

P.O. Box 749

515 County Farm Lane NE

Brookhaven, Mississippi 39602-0749

(601) 833-6621 office

rchapin@mfc.state.ms.us

Photo Credits: Photos provided by Jimmy Mordica.

 

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