Two species of golden Alexanders growing side by side in the Barn Prairie. |
A closely related species is Zizia aptera (heart-leafed golden Alexanders; C value of 9). This is a lot less common in Wisconsin, although I know of one remnant prairie in Dane County where this is the only Zizia species present. We have very little of Z. aptera, and what we do have was brought in as seed, but it seems to slowly becoming established. The photo at the top shows the two species growing side-by-side.We also have a few Z. aptera in the ridge-top savanna.
When we were first creating the Barn Prairie we had a lot of trouble with smooth brome and arranged to have the co-op spray it with glyphosate early in the season. The idea was that cool-season grasses (such as smooth brome) would already be up and would be killed, but warm-season grasses and prairie forbs would still be underground and would be unaffected. This mostly worked, but getting the spray timing right is a little tricky. The year we sprayed, tiny shoots of golden Alexanders were already starting to come up, and some of them were set back. In fact, that year we essentially had no golden Alexanders at all. Fortunately, they recovered next year and are now doing very well, as the photo shows.
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