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TROPICAL
SODA APPLE IN PENNSYLVANIA: MERELY AN ISOLATED INCIDENT?.
D. D. Lingenfelter and W. S. Curran, 1998. Proc.
NEWSS 52:22.
Tropical soda apple (Solanum viarum
Dunal) (TSA) is an exotic, perennial, noxious pasture weed primarily
found in Florida, with minor infestations in Georgia, Alabama,
Mississippi, South Carolina, North Carolina, and Tennessee. Since
TSA was found in Florida in the late 1980s, it has infested over
1 million acres (405,000 ha) of pastures, rangelands, other cropping
areas, and ditch banks in the southeastern region of the United
States. In the summer of 1996, TSA was found in Northumberland
County, Pennsylvania. It is believed to have spread to Pennsylvania
by seed in manure via cattle transport from Florida in 1995. A
local crop consultant was unable to identify the plants and subsequently
forwarded a specimen to Penn State for identification. Several
immature TSA plants were collected from the site following identification
and the area since has been monitored for new TSA plants.
The recent TSA occurrence in Pennsylvania
prompted federally-permitted research at Penn State University
to determine if TSA can survive in northern climates. In 1997,
a field experiment was initiated at the Penn State Agronomy Research
Farm in central Pennsylvania. Tropical soda apple plants were
grown to determine the potential for viable seed production and
if TSA can overwinter and regenerate from rootstock in the Northeast.
Preliminary results suggest that TSA may have the potential to
reproduce as far north as central Pennsylvania.
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