Composting As an Alternative Management Strategy for Wild Taro Waste

Wild taro (Colocasia esculenta) is identified as an invasive species in freshwater regions throughout the southeastern United States as well as Puerto Rico, Jamaica, and India, and thrives in freshwater swamps, streambanks, and riparian areas with rocky crevices that provide strong footholds. Manage...

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Main Authors: Jen A. Sembera, Tina M. Waliczek, Erica J. Meier
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: American Society for Horticultural Science (ASHS) 2019-03-01
Series:HortTechnology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.ashs.org/horttech/view/journals/horttech/29/2/article-p205.xml
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spelling doaj-d6c04cb6703d444198a709a27a75d2572020-11-25T02:26:16ZengAmerican Society for Horticultural Science (ASHS)HortTechnology1943-77142019-03-01292205209https://doi.org/10.21273/HORTTECH04194-18Composting As an Alternative Management Strategy for Wild Taro WasteJen A. SemberaTina M. WaliczekErica J. Meier Wild taro (Colocasia esculenta) is identified as an invasive species in freshwater regions throughout the southeastern United States as well as Puerto Rico, Jamaica, and India, and thrives in freshwater swamps, streambanks, and riparian areas with rocky crevices that provide strong footholds. Management methods for the plant include using herbicides, mechanical cutting, manual removal, or a combination of methods with disposal into landfills. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the potential to manage wild taro waste using composting and to test the quality of the resulting compost. This study used ≈12 yard3 of wild taro mixed with food waste and regionally harvested wood chips to create ≈6 yard3 of cured compost. Oven propagule mortality tests determined wild taro propagules exposed to temperatures between 45 and 52 °C for a minimum of 3 days were killed. These temperatures were achieved during the active phase of the composting process. The final compost products created were of equal or higher quality to current compost standards. Therefore, this study determined composting and waste management industries can accept and incorporate wild taro as a feedstock to create a desirable compost product for application in the horticulture and agriculture fields rather than managing the species with herbicides and/or other disposal methods.https://journals.ashs.org/horttech/view/journals/horttech/29/2/article-p205.xmlaquatic plant managementcolocasia esculentacompostcompost qualityexoticinvasive species
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jen A. Sembera
Tina M. Waliczek
Erica J. Meier
spellingShingle Jen A. Sembera
Tina M. Waliczek
Erica J. Meier
Composting As an Alternative Management Strategy for Wild Taro Waste
HortTechnology
aquatic plant management
colocasia esculenta
compost
compost quality
exotic
invasive species
author_facet Jen A. Sembera
Tina M. Waliczek
Erica J. Meier
author_sort Jen A. Sembera
title Composting As an Alternative Management Strategy for Wild Taro Waste
title_short Composting As an Alternative Management Strategy for Wild Taro Waste
title_full Composting As an Alternative Management Strategy for Wild Taro Waste
title_fullStr Composting As an Alternative Management Strategy for Wild Taro Waste
title_full_unstemmed Composting As an Alternative Management Strategy for Wild Taro Waste
title_sort composting as an alternative management strategy for wild taro waste
publisher American Society for Horticultural Science (ASHS)
series HortTechnology
issn 1943-7714
publishDate 2019-03-01
description Wild taro (Colocasia esculenta) is identified as an invasive species in freshwater regions throughout the southeastern United States as well as Puerto Rico, Jamaica, and India, and thrives in freshwater swamps, streambanks, and riparian areas with rocky crevices that provide strong footholds. Management methods for the plant include using herbicides, mechanical cutting, manual removal, or a combination of methods with disposal into landfills. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the potential to manage wild taro waste using composting and to test the quality of the resulting compost. This study used ≈12 yard3 of wild taro mixed with food waste and regionally harvested wood chips to create ≈6 yard3 of cured compost. Oven propagule mortality tests determined wild taro propagules exposed to temperatures between 45 and 52 °C for a minimum of 3 days were killed. These temperatures were achieved during the active phase of the composting process. The final compost products created were of equal or higher quality to current compost standards. Therefore, this study determined composting and waste management industries can accept and incorporate wild taro as a feedstock to create a desirable compost product for application in the horticulture and agriculture fields rather than managing the species with herbicides and/or other disposal methods.
topic aquatic plant management
colocasia esculenta
compost
compost quality
exotic
invasive species
url https://journals.ashs.org/horttech/view/journals/horttech/29/2/article-p205.xml
work_keys_str_mv AT jenasembera compostingasanalternativemanagementstrategyforwildtarowaste
AT tinamwaliczek compostingasanalternativemanagementstrategyforwildtarowaste
AT ericajmeier compostingasanalternativemanagementstrategyforwildtarowaste
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