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RE: Iris pseudacorus


 

Sean,

Thanks, and good luck.  Did you see the email from George Hildenbrant?

Aside from the factors you mention, Iâm also interested in SIGNA avoiding legal troubles.

Ken

 

 

From: iris-species@yahoogroups.com [mailto:iris-species@yahoogroups.com]
Sent: Monday, March 16, 2015 5:05 PM
To: iris-species@yahoogroups.com
Subject: Re: [iris-species] Iris pseudacorus

 

 

Yes, I'd be willing to do that. SIGNA promotes cultivation of species and peservation of species in the wild, and the pseudacorus issue seems like it's right at the intersection of both, so I think it's important that we consider it.

 

Sean Z

 

On Sun, Mar 15, 2015 at 2:15 PM, Ken Walkup k*@cornell.edu [iris-species] <i*@yahoogroups.com> wrote:

 

Hi All,

Sean, would you be willing to go one step further than putting an article together for the bulletin, and head a committee to study whether SIGNA should take an official stand on pseudacorus?  Drop it from the exchange,  or communicate with states who are regulating it, or whatever? And if one or two others would like to join in?

Aside from the need to run the seed exchange responsibly, it would sure be a mess if SIGNA was found to be distributing the seeds in a prohibited area, and the differing regulations from state to state make that a possibility, I think.

Personally Iâm conflicted about it.  It certainly can be a pest here in the Finger Lakes region of NY.  Iâve seen ponds and wetlands completely choked with it.  When we were looking for a house four years ago, we saw one property with a pond, a desirable feature for us.  It was ringed with clumps of pseudacorus, and I knew Iâd never be able to eradicate it. 

On the other hand, itâs a valuable plant for hybridizing, producing some very garden-worthy plants. It would be a pity to deprive hybridizers, and the general public, of these.  I also know that it can be used in garden settings without fear of it getting loose, IF some attention is paid. I have a planting of several clumps of pseudacorus âPrimroseâ mixed with  sanguinea âViolaceaâ.   Of course, itâs hard to imagine a way of regulating it so that only the right people grow it.

Ken

From: i*@yahoogroups.com [mailto:i*@yahoogroups.com]
Sent: Sunday, March 15, 2015 9:15 AM
To: i*@yahoogroups.com
Subject: RE: [iris-species] Iris pseudacorus

 

 

I've got a lot to say, but just a quick note regarding how hard it is to figure this out because each state is different: it is actually illegal to *possess*, not just buy or sell, pseudacorus in Illinois as of August 2013. It was hard to find because Illinois refers to "injurious species", not invasive species or noxious weeds, and apparently doesn't have an official website listing said plants.

 

I'm working through this state by state so I can give you guys a lot more information soon.

 

Sean Z

 

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Posted by: Ken Walkup <krw25@cornell.edu>
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