Pond Boss
Posted By: Suthernbowrush What is taking over my pond?? - 06/23/16 04:56 AM
I have a small pond, maybe 1.5 acres. I didn't personally stock it but have spent time and energy harvesting small bass, releasing big bass and feeding it, etc...

The plants were a few feet out from the bank a couple years ago and actually made a good mixture of cover for the fish and a good grass line to flip a jig and it made for good fishing.

Now, its taken over!! How do I get rid of this stuff without killing my fish? I'm not financially able to get a pond doctor that uses the machines to scoop it up and haul it off...

Thanks in advance for any advice and suggestions!

struggling to post pic, sorry
Posted By: Suthernbowrush Re: What is taking over my pond?? - 06/23/16 05:01 AM
alright, here's the pictures....

Attached picture IMG_5228.JPG
Attached picture IMG_5227.JPG
Posted By: Kelly Duffie Re: What is taking over my pond?? - 06/23/16 05:41 AM
The predominant round-leafed plant is pennywort (aka dollar-weed when it grows in your lawn). The other intermixed plants are probably alligator weed, primrose or smartweed - or a combination thereof. Your wide-angle photos don't permit close-up inspection to specifically ID the other plants.
Aquatic-labeled formulations of glyphosate, 2,4-D, triclopyr or imazapyr are effective on all of the listed species. Other factors, including water-use restrictions that are relative to your pond's primary or secondary purpose, may dictate which of these chemistries is most appropriate for your needs.
None of these herbicide formulation are expected to have any adverse effects directly on resident fish, but treating/killing too much weed growth at one time can create a fish-lethal dissolved-oxygen decline due excessive bacterial decomposition of the treated biomass (which utilizes available oxygen).
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