Fallopia spp.
Knotweed
Description
Into this genus belongs such species as Fallopia japonica, Falopia sachalinensis or Falopia bohemica. The types of Japanese knotweed and Sakhalin knotweed come from Asia. They were imported to Europe as honey-bearing and ornamental plants. The Czech knotweed is their hybrid, which originated in Europe. Knotweed are stout, hardy, fast-growing plants. They reach a height of around 2 meters and create impenetrable thickets. They grow in abandoned, unused places with disturbed vegetation, in the vicinity of waterways, roads, railways, but they are also expanding in meadows, in riparian vegetation. They prefer wetter places, richer in nutrients. They often form extensive dense stands that strongly suppress other types of plants. They have a strong root system that can grow over asphalt and concrete. They spread mainly vegetatively - by rhizomes that overgrow the soil in several layers below each other.
Symptom
They reach a height of around 2 meters and create impenetrable thickets. They spread mainly vegetatively - by rhizomes that overgrow the soil in several layers below each other.
Tree Species: Different tree species
Part of a plant- attacked: Roots
Pest significance: Harmful
Pest Category: Other, Invasive plants
Invasive Species: Yes
Present in EU: Yes
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