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Holcus lanatus L.
Yorkshire Fog

Reference
Sp.Pl. [Linnaeus] 2:1048 (1753)
Conservation Code
Not threatened
Naturalised Status
Alien to Western Australia
Name Status
Current

Tufted perennial, grass-like or herb, 0.3-0.7 m high. Fl. green/purple, Oct to Dec or Jan to Mar or Aug. Peaty black, brown or grey sand, red sandy clay. Swamps, creek edges, disturbed areas.

Grazyna Paczkowska, Descriptive Catalogue, 19 November 1993
Image

Distribution

IBRA Regions
Jarrah Forest, Swan Coastal Plain, Warren.
IBRA Subregions
Dandaragan Plateau, Northern Jarrah Forest, Perth, Southern Jarrah Forest, Warren.
IMCRA Regions
WA South Coast.
Local Government Areas (LGAs)
Albany, Armadale, Augusta Margaret River, Bayswater, Bridgetown-Greenbushes, Bunbury, Busselton, Cockburn, Collie, Dardanup, Denmark, Donnybrook-Balingup, Gingin, Harvey, Joondalup, Kalamunda, Manjimup, Mundaring, Nannup, Perth, Plantagenet, South Perth, Swan, Wanneroo, Waroona.

Management Notes (for the Swan NRM Region)

Alternative Names. Common velvet grass, soft meadow grass.

General Biology. Growth form. Grass. Life form. Perennial, caespitose. Reproduction. Seed, tillering. Dispersal. Wind, water, birds, mammals, possibly ants, machinery and vehicles. Photosynthetic Pathway. C3. Toxicity. Causes allergic reactions in humans, poisonous to mammals. Seedbank persistence. 3 to 9 years. Fire response. Likely killed by fire, but occasionally resprouts. Soil-stored seed may survive and germinate.

Notes. Naturalised in east Asia, New Zealand, North and South America. Can be a serious weed of freshwater wetland margins. Forms dense stands and has semi-prostrate or prostrate rosette shoots, allowing it to have an aggressive smothering effect on other flora. Tolerates a wide range of conditions but is most invasive in wet soils in sunny or semi-shaded sites. Can survive moderate drought. May disappear in dry years and become abundant in wet years. Susceptible to severe frost. Exhibits considerable variation in morphology and growth habit, allowing it to successfully colonise different habitats. Able to compete with earlier emerging annual grasses and can still access soil nutrients amongst high densities of other grasses. Produces prolific seed. Relatively deep rooted. May have allelopathic effects. Foliage is tolerant to salt (sea) spray but intolerant of saline soils. Agricultural cultivars and natural hybrids are formed with H. mollis.

Additional information. Origin. Northern Africa, temperate Asia, Europe. History of use/introduction. Contaminant of cereal seed, pasture grass, land stabilisation. Similar exotic species. Anthoxanthum odoratum, Holcus mollis.

Suggested method of management and control. Remove isolated plants before they set seed. Spray glyphosate 0.5% in spring or when the first seed head appears for optimal translocation to roots. Regular slashing reduces its vigour, but should not be done while plants are seeding. Severe defoliation and repeated herbicide treatment provide the best control. Controlled burning in spring or autumn can be a potential useful tool for suppression. Read the manufacturers' labels and material safety data sheets before using herbicides. For further information consult the Australian Pesticides and Veterinary Medicines Authority to determine the status of permits for your situation or state.

Management Calendar

Calendar Type Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Comments
Active Growth O O O O O Y Y Y Y Y Y Y  
Germination               Y Y Y Y Y  
Flowering Y Y Y           Y Y Y Y  
Fruiting Y Y Y Y Y                
Optimum Treatment                 Y Y Y    

Legend: Y = Yes, regularly, O = Occasionally, U = Uncertain, referred by others but not confirmed.

 

References

  • Abraham, J.K., Corbin, J.D. & D'Antonio, C.M.D. (2009) California native and exotic perennial grasses differ in their repsonse to soil nitrogen, exotic annual grass density, and order of emergence. Plant Ecology, 201: 445-456.
  • Ashraf, M., McNeilly, T. & Bradshaw, A.D. (1986) Tolerance of Holcus lanatus and Agrostis stolonifera to sodium chloride in soil solution and saline spray. Plant and Soil, 96 (1): 77-84.
  • Baskin, C.C. & Baskin, J.M. (1998) Ecology of seed dormancy and germination in grasses. In Population biology of grasses (ed. G.P. Cheplick) . Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, UK.
  • Beddows, A.R. (1961) Biological flora of the British Isles: Holcus lanatus L. Journal of Ecology, 49 (2): 421-430.
  • Blood, K. (2001) Environmental weeds: a field guide for SE Australia. C.H. Jerram and Associates, Melbourne.
  • Brown, K. & Brooks, K. (2002) Bushland Weeds: A Practical Guide to their Management. Environmental Weeds Action Network, Greenwood.
  • Carr, G.W., Yugovic, J.V. & Robinson, K.E. (1992) Environmental weed invasions in Victoria. Department of Conservation and Environment, Melbourne.
  • Delatte, E. & Chabrerier, O. (2008) Performances des plantes herbacees forestieres dans la dispersion de leurs graines par la fourmi Myrmica ruginodis. CR Biologies, 331: 309-320.
  • Hussey, B.M.J., Keighery, G.J., Dodd, J., Lloyd, S.G. & Cousens, R.D. (2007) Western Weeds. A guide to the weeds of Western Australia. 2nd Edition. The Plant Protection Society of Western Australia, Victoria Park.
  • Lopez, I.F., Balocchi, O.A., Kemp, P.D. & Valdes, C. (2009) Phenotypic variability in Holcus lanatus L. in Southern Chile: a strategy that enhances plant survival and pasture stability. Crop and Pasture Science, 60: 768-777.
  • Moore, C.B. & Moore, J.H. (2002) Herbiguide, the pesticide expert on a disk. Herbiguide, PO Box 44 Albany, Western Australia, 6330.
  • Pitcher, D. & Russo, M.J. (1988) Element Stewardship Abstract for Holcus lanatus. The Nature Conservancy, Virginia.
  • Prober, S., Taylor, S., Edwards, R. & Mills, B. (2009) Effectiveness of repeated autumn and spring fires for understorey restoration in weed-invaded temperate Eucalypt woodlands. Applied Vegetation Science, 12: 440-450.
  • The UniProt Consortium (2009) Holcus lanatus (Velvet grass), The Universal Protein Resource (UniProt), Nucleic Acids Res. URL: http://www.uniprot.org/uniprot/P43216 - Accessed November 2009.
  • Thomsen, M.A., D'Antonio, C.M., Suttle, K.B. & Sousa, W.P. (2006) Ecological resistance, seed density and their interactions determine patterns of invasion in a California coastal grassland. Ecology Letters, 9: 160-170.
  • USDA, ARS, National Genetic Resources Program (2009) Germplasm Resources Information Network - (GRIN). National Germplasm Resources Laboratory, Beltsville, Maryland. URL: https://npgsweb.ars-grin.gov/gringlobal/taxon/taxonomysimple.aspx - Accessed October 2009.