Interesting, Geoff.
One aspect of my
PDC I loved was discussions of how pioneer species go into empty, damaged areas and often create thorny, hard-to-penetrate biomass that stops erosion and often contributes nitrogen to the soil, depending on the species.
In the tropics, you often have these thorny patches. It's almost like nature is hanging up, "construction ahead, go away" signs.
However, in many cases these species are part of a succession. Eventually, when the soil is improved, you have a bush or tree that shoots up through the pioneer species and eventually shades them out.
But Kudzu is like nothing I've seen before in this category. Yes, it's great for stopping erosion and fixing nitrogen, but it can grow even in nitrogen-rich soil (as far as I know) and can overcome very productive forest ecosystems, killing them.
If you chop and drop kudzu, will the cut portion regrow, or only what's attached to the
root?
Is there any way to plant a thick
enough density of plants and improve the soil enough so that kudzu can't take root?