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About Hawkweeds in
the Western US and Canada
Invasion Success
Habitat Preference
The name
Hieracium comes from the Greek ‘hierax’, meaning hawk; allegedly
keen-sighted hawks of yore ate the sap of the brightly colored
plants to sharpen their eyesight. In North America, invasive
hawkweeds are an eyesore – and they are among the most troublesome
weeds in the Pacific Northwest (PNW). The first species arrived in
the region as recently as seventy years ago, probably from the western
expansion of infestations from eastern Canada and the US during or
shortly after the Second World War. There are now about 14 species
of invasive hawkweeds in the PNW. Rapid spread of hawkweed has been
possible because much of the coastal and
inland regions encompassing Washington, Idaho, Oregon, Montana and
British Columbia is
considered susceptible to invasion by these aggressive weeds.
Invasive hawkweed commonly occur as populations of intermediate
types throughout the PNW, making identification of invasive hawkweed
species difficult. Abundant variation in plant characteristics due
to apomixis and perhaps occasional hybridization, environmental and
site influences, and natural variation (polymorphism) has resulted
in the description of thousands of species, subspecies and types
worldwide.
INVASION
SUCCESS
Hawkweeds
possess many characteristics that allow a species to become
invasive: perennial, apomictic, high seed production and
germinability, long distance seed dispersal, spread/regenerate from
root fragments, root buds, rhizomes and stolons, rapid generation
time (ca. 63 days), and broad latitudinal range. In addition,
several hawkweed species, particularly orange hawkweed, are popular
ornamentals. They have been and continue to be spread by
intentional and accidental human activities.
HABITAT
PREFERENCES
Invasive
hawkweeds infest similar habitats in Washington, Idaho, Oregon,
Montana and British Columbia. Found predominantly in open fields,
mountain meadows and clearings in forest zones, hawkweeds also
infest permanent pastures, cleared timber units, abandoned farmland
and other modified habitats where the soil is well drained,
coarse-textured, and moderately low in organic matter.
Hawkweeds are
preadapted to many habitats in the Pacific and Inland Northwest, and
mesic habitats in the Intermountain West. Throughout most of the
PNW, hawkweeds are generally found at elevations ranging from 725 m
(2400 feet) to over 1700 m (5500 feet). They occur more commonly at
lower elevations above 51°N latitude. None of the invasive
hawkweeds are found in the natural grasslands or shrub-steppe of the
PNW, and they have not proven to be invasive in the dry habitats of
southcentral British Columbia and central Washington.
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Idaho, Moscow, ID
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