Cattails, Typha spp., are common emergent aquatic plants. They
are native perennials that grow in moist soil and are adapted to water
depths up to 2.5 feet. Two species of cattails occur in south central
Oklahoma and north central Texas.
Cattails
can be desirable or undesirable, depending upon a pond or marsh manager's
goals. They provide nesting habitat for blackbirds and some duck species,
as well as brood rearing cover and feeding substrate for ducks and fish.
They help prevent erosion of dams and pond banks. Stands of cattails
provide natural blinds for duck hunters and bird watchers.
For those interested in native foods, several parts of the plants are
edible. The corms and young greenish shoots attached to the rhizomes
can be collected during fall, winter, and early spring. The corms and
shoots can be eaten raw or cooked as vegetables. The shoots should be
collected before they are two feet tall and peeled before eating. The
immature green spikes can be collected during late spring and peeled,
boiled, and served like corn on the cob. Immediately after the staminate
(male) spikes ripen, yellow pollen can be collected, sifted, dried, and
mixed with other flour for food such as pancakes and muffins. From late
fall through early spring, the inner part of the rhizomes can provide
gluten-rich flour. This flour is generally obtained by peeling the rhizomes,
breaking them apart underwater, washing the flour from the fibers, straining
the fibers from the flour, washing the flour again, and then pouring
off the water. The wet flour can be used immediately or dried and then
stored.
The cottonlike down collected from ripe pistillate (female) spikes has
been used for flotation in life rafts and life preservers. The long basal
leaves are used for making rush seating in chairs. The by-products from
processing cattails can be fed to livestock or used as mulch. The spring
growth provides fair cattle forage.
Yet, with their many potential benefits, cattails frequently become
pests. In shallow impoundments, they can dominate plant communities,
reducing plant diversity and habitat for other organisms. They can hinder
fishing, swimming, and boating. They can impede water flow through irrigation
or drainage channels. They can interfere with fish harvests in aquaculture
facilities. Extensive stands of cattails accelerate the eutrophication
of impoundments, which is a process of aging, nutrient enrichment, and
sedimentation.
Cattails spread very quickly. A few cattails are easier to control than
many, so prompt action is warranted when a pond or marsh manager's goals
dictate that cattails should be controlled or managed. There are many
tools available for the job, including increasing water depth, cutting,
crushing, grazing, stocking grass carp, or spraying herbicides.
"An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure." To prevent
cattails from dominating an impoundment, design or excavate most of it
deeper than 3.5 feet during construction. Shallow areas of existing impoundments
can be excavated with backhoes, track hoes, or other machines to minimize
the areas where cattails can grow. Sometimes the height of dams or water
control structures can be raised to increase water depths. However, impoundment
manipulations that occur after initial construction tend to be relatively
expensive.
Seedling cattails can be killed by simply pulling them up before they
establish rhizomes. Established cattails can be killed by repeated cutting,
crushing, or grazing (several times a year), which depletes their energy
reserves as they try to regrow and basically starves them to death. Generally,
the latter approach also involves drawdowns to facilitate the cutting,
crushing, or grazing. These treatments usually harm other emergent aquatic
and shoreline plants in the vicinity of the treatments.
Large grass carp, typically those over 10 pounds, control cattails in
many impoundments. However in some impoundments, they seem to impact
cattails relatively little. Generally, at least ten grass carp per surface
acre are stocked to control submerged aquatic plants. When the grass
carp eliminate the submerged aquatic plants and grow large enough, they
often consume coarse emergent aquatic plants such as cattails. However,
such extensive removal of aquatic plants often causes water quality,
wildlife habitat, and fish habitat to deteriorate.
Several herbicides are labeled for treating cattails, including glyphosate
(Rodeo and Glypro), diquat dibromide (Reward), and fluridone (Sonar).
When I decide that a herbicide is my best control or management option,
I usually choose glyphosate to control cattails, considering relative
effectiveness, cost, risk to nontarget species, and use restrictions.
A nonionic surfactant should be mixed in solution with glyphosate herbicides
when cattails are treated. Please always read and follow the label when
using any herbicide.
To paraphrase Shakespeare, "To control, or not to control: that
is the question."