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Hydrilla Eradication Project Main | Summary | History | Reports | Info
Hydrilla is legally designated as a Class A noxious weed. The plant spreads by tubers, turions (vegetative buds), and plant fragments. Once established, the plant grows rapidly, overcoming native species and making monotypic stands (only one plant). In affected areas, the plant fills the water from bottom to surface, restricting both agricultural and recreational uses. Both California and Florida spend millions of dollars each year to stop new hydrilla infestations and maintain open waters in affected areas. Over the last nine years, Washington state and local agencies have spent $575,000 to eradicate hydrilla from Lake Lucerne and Pipe Lake. Research studies in Florida verified that hydrilla tubers can remain viable in a lake for as many as ten years. Observations at Lake Lucerne and Pipe Lake suggest that new plants germinate each year from tubers in the sediment, although the numbers of plants have substantially declined since the beginning of the eradication project. This decline is consistent with Florida findings where and eradication management actions are also ongoing in an affected lake. Herbicides have been the primary tool used to eradicate hydrilla from Lake Lucerne and Pipe Lake, although a method where SCUBA divers pull hydrilla by hand was used exclusively in 2001 and 2002. This was the result of a lawsuit filed in Oregon under the Clearn Water Act (CWA) that called into question whether aquatic herbicides should be considered pollution. There was a hiatus in granting aquatic herbicide application permits until the U.S. Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals decided that aquatic herbicides were to be held to the standrs of the National Pollution Discharge Elimination System (NPDES) permitting requirements under the CWA.In 2003, applications of the slow-release form of Sonar to the lakes were resumed after hydrilla assessments showed that hand pulling was not decreasing the hydrilla population. Currently, hydrilla appears to be nearly eradicated in Lake Lucerne, while in Pipe Lake it still remains in discrete areas, largely at depths of 10 to 15 feet. The specific findings and management actions for each project year(s) are summarized below. For more information, contact Sally Abella, Project Manager at 206-296-8382. *Indicates a link leading outside the King County Web site.
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For questions about the Lake Stewardship Program or the contents of this page, please contact Sally Abella, 206-296-8382. For questions about the Updated: August 18, 2004 |
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