Welcome to KnotweedMethods.org. This site is under construction as we continue to add content. To get notification when we launch the full site, or when important new studies are posted, sign up here.
The goal of this site is to help users with four main things: Identification, Management, Use, and Education. We do this mainly through sharing the most up-to-date and reliable scientific studies and recommendations from experienced management agencies and land stewards.
Identification—How to identify Japanese knotweed, Bohemian knotweed, and various hybrid, related, and commonly confused or misidentified species.
Management—How to manage Japanese knotweed and related species, including manual, mechanical, cultural, chemical, biological, and integrated methods, and best management practices for control, eradication, and other management goals.
Once when we launch, then never more than twice a year, early Spring and late Fall.
Uses—How to use Japanese knotweed and related species, for food, medicine, agriculture, paper, dye, biocomposites, and more, including methods for safe and efficient drying and processing of plant biomass. We believe exploring uses of knotweed biomass, when combined with education on safe management practices and handling, can be a more effective means to support ongoing management and restoration efforts.
Resources—Resources for identifying, managing, and using Japanese knotweed and related species, including location-specific agency recommendations, educational materials, and tools for measuring and monitoring management projects. This will include a tool for monitoring and documenting your own management projects, in an effort to build a robust body of “gray literature” or accessible evidence of the most effective methods.
We are a group of land stewards working on a knotweed management project in the Catskills region of New York. This site will also document our efforts. For more information on volunteering with our project in Prattsville, NY, contact us.
DO NOT disturb knotweed roots or cut them into small pieces, which can encourage spread. A single pea-sized fragment of rhizome or lower stem node carried downstream or transferred via soil or equipment can lead to a whole new stand.
EDDR (Early Detection Rapid Response): Smaller single knotweed stems growing from propagules in new areas along stream banks can be very carefully hand-cut and dug out and disposed of.
Established stands: Careful cutting regimes, at least 4x a season, repeated for at least 4 years, may eventually deprive rhizomes of carbohydrates. Cut stalks can be dried on site, or disposed of according to local regulations. Never compost freshly cut knotweed or leave stems in contact with ground.
Ask your local conservation orgs about chemical regulations, and talk with your neighbors. Glyphosate spray at 2% solution will effectively translocate to rhizomes only if applied to leaves in Fall window after flowering but before frost. Earlier applications will not translocate, and stronger solutions will only kill visible parts without affecting underground reserves. Tall and hard to reach thickets can be cut in June to prepare for Fall treatment of regrowth. Stem injection at higher concentrations may also be used in sensitive areas.
Other removal methods like mowing, tarping, smothering, solarizing, burning, digging and excavating, and other chemical treatments have been shown to be ineffective, costly, and sometimes counterproductive.
Remember: Knotweed can go into dormancy below ground for many years, and management is a long term project that requires patience and commitment, as well as careful monitoring of new growth.
ALWAYS have a plan before you begin for what to plant to replace and compete with knotweed. Fast-growing willow trees are easy to grow and propagate, can help in streambank stabilization, flood mitigation, and carbon sequestration, and can be sustainably harvested and used in a variety of ways. Also consider native grasses and other pollinator plants. And have a plan for stewardship: who—besides you, with you, or after you—will help care for this place?