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Johnson Grass

Johnson Grass

Sorghum halepense

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Johnson Grass (Sorghum halepense) is a perennial grass species in the family Poaceae, widely recognized as one of the world's most notorious agricultural weeds. Despite its weedy reputation, it is a close relative of cultivated sorghum (Sorghum bicolor) and shares many of its physiological traits, including remarkable drought tolerance and rapid growth.

• First described by Linnaeus in 1753 as Holcus halepensis, later reclassified into the genus Sorghum
• Listed among the "World's Worst Weeds" by the International Survey of Herbicide-Resistant Weeds
• Capable of producing extensive colonies through both prolific seed production and aggressive rhizome networks
• Considered one of the ten most economically damaging weed species globally

Taxonomie

Reich Plantae
Abteilung Tracheophyta
Klasse Liliopsida
Ordnung Poales
Familie Poaceae
Gattung Sorghum
Species Sorghum halepense
Johnson Grass is native to the Mediterranean region and western Asia, but has since naturalized across every continent except Antarctica.

• Native range spans southern Europe, North Africa, and the Middle East
• Introduced to the Americas in the early 19th century, likely as a contaminant in seed stock or as a prospective forage crop
• First documented in the United States around 1830 in South Carolina; by the 1840s it had spread throughout the southern states
• The common name "Johnson Grass" is believed to derive from Colonel William Johnson, who cultivated it as a forage crop in Alabama around 1840
• Now established in tropical, subtropical, and warm-temperate regions worldwide, including Australia, South America, southern Africa, and southern Asia
Johnson Grass is a tall, robust perennial grass that can form dense, spreading colonies.

Stems & Leaves:
• Culms (stems) are erect, stout, and typically 0.5–2.5 meters tall, occasionally reaching 3 meters
• Leaf blades are flat, linear, 20–50 cm long and 1–2.5 cm wide, with a prominent white midrib
• Ligule is membranous, fringed with hairs (~2–4 mm long)
• Leaves are glabrous (smooth) with rough margins

Rhizomes:
• Extensive, creeping, fleshy rhizomes are a defining feature
• Rhizomes can penetrate soil to depths of over 1 meter and spread laterally several meters per growing season
• Rhizome fragments as small as 2–3 cm can regenerate into new plants, making mechanical control extremely difficult

Inflorescence:
• Open, spreading panicle, 15–50 cm long, with ascending to spreading branches
• Spikelets occur in pairs (one sessile and fertile, one pedicellate and sterile or male)
• Fertile spikelets are lanceolate, ~4.5–5.5 mm long, with awns that are twisted and bent, 10–15 mm long
• Color ranges from purplish to straw-yellow at maturity

Seeds:
• Small, oval caryopses (~3 mm long)
• A single plant can produce 28,000 to 80,000+ seeds per year
• Seeds remain viable in soil for up to 7 years
Johnson Grass thrives in disturbed habitats and is particularly problematic in agricultural settings.

Habitat:
• Roadsides, field margins, ditches, floodplains, and disturbed grasslands
• Prefers fertile, well-drained soils but tolerates a wide range of soil types, including heavy clays and sandy loams
• Grows best in full sun; moderately shade-tolerant
• Tolerates both periodic flooding and extended drought

Climate:
• Optimal growth occurs at temperatures between 25–35°C
• Frost-sensitive; top growth is killed by hard freezes, but rhizomes survive underground and regenerate in spring
• Requires a minimum of ~400 mm annual rainfall but performs best with 600–1,000 mm

Reproduction & Spread:
• Reproduces both sexually (by seed) and vegetatively (by rhizomes)
• Seeds are dispersed by wind, water, contaminated farm machinery, livestock, and contaminated grain or hay
• Rhizome expansion allows a single clone to cover several hundred square meters within a few growing seasons
• Known to hybridize with cultivated sorghum (Sorghum bicolor), potentially transferring herbicide resistance and weedy traits to crop populations

Ecological Interactions:
• Serves as a host for several agricultural pests and pathogens, including the sorghum midge (Stenodiplosis sorghicola), corn earworm (Helicoverpa zea), and various cereal viruses
• Can harbor the bacterium Clavibacter michiganensis subsp. nebraskensis, causal agent of Goss's wilt in maize
• Provides cover and food for some bird species and small mammals
Johnson Grass poses significant toxicity risks, particularly to livestock.

Hydrogen Cyanide (Prussic Acid):
• Contains cyanogenic glycosides (primarily dhurrin), which release hydrogen cyanide (HCN) when plant tissues are damaged
• Young regrowth, drought-stressed plants, and frost-damaged tissues have the highest HCN concentrations
• Poisoning can occur rapidly in ruminants; lethal doses can be reached within hours of grazing
• HCN levels can exceed 200 ppm in young shoots — concentrations above 200 ppm are considered dangerous for cattle

Nitrate Accumulation:
• Under certain conditions (heavy nitrogen fertilization, drought, cloudy weather), Johnson Grass can accumulate toxic levels of nitrates
• Nitrate poisoning in livestock causes methemoglobinemia, leading to oxygen deprivation and potentially death

Other Toxicity:
• Ingestion of large quantities can cause neurological symptoms in horses, including ataxia and urinary incontinence, possibly due to chronic cyanide exposure
• Allergic contact dermatitis has been reported in humans handling the plant
Johnson Grass is not intentionally planted as a crop in most regions due to its status as a noxious weed. However, it has historically been used as a forage grass and erosion control plant in some areas.

Growth Conditions:
• Light: Full sun preferred; tolerates partial shade
• Soil: Adaptable to a wide range of soil types; performs best in fertile, moist, well-drained loams with pH 5.5–7.5
• Temperature: Optimal growth at 25–35°C; killed by hard frost but regenerates from rhizomes
• Water: Drought-tolerant once established; grows vigorously with adequate moisture

Control & Management:
• Mechanical control is difficult due to extensive rhizome systems; plowing can spread rhizome fragments
• Repeated mowing before seed set can reduce vigor over time
• Herbicide options include glyphosate, fluazifop, and quizalofop, though herbicide-resistant biotypes have been documented in multiple countries
• Integrated management combining tillage, herbicides, and competitive crop rotations is most effective
• Biological control agents have been investigated but none are widely deployed
Despite its weedy nature, Johnson Grass has had several historical and limited contemporary uses.

Forage:
• Historically cultivated as a forage and hay crop in the southern United States and parts of Australia
• Nutritious when harvested at the correct growth stage and free of high HCN levels
• Palatable to cattle and horses when properly managed

Erosion Control:
• Extensive rhizome network makes it effective for stabilizing soil on embankments and disturbed sites
• Used in some regions for revegetation of degraded land

Bioenergy:
• High biomass production has led to research interest as a potential bioenergy crop
• Yields of 15–20 tonnes of dry matter per hectare have been recorded under favorable conditions

Phytoremediation:
• Studied for its ability to accumulate heavy metals from contaminated soils

Hybridization:
• Used in sorghum breeding programs as a source of genes for drought tolerance, pest resistance, and perennial growth habit
• Perennial sorghum research aims to transfer rhizomatous growth from S. halepense to cultivated S. bicolor to develop perennial grain sorghum varieties

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Johnson Grass holds a notorious place in agricultural history — it was named one of the ten worst weeds in the world by the International Survey of Herbicide-Resistant Weeds, and it has developed resistance to multiple herbicide classes, including glyphosate, ALS inhibitors, and ACCase inhibitors. The plant's rhizome system is extraordinarily resilient: • Rhizomes can survive burial depths of over 1 meter and remain dormant for years • A single rhizome fragment as small as 2 cm can regenerate an entire new plant • Rhizome biomass underground can exceed the above-ground biomass by a factor of 3 to 5 Johnson Grass is also a remarkable example of convergent evolution with cultivated sorghum: • It is the closest wild relative of grain sorghum (Sorghum bicolor) • The two species can hybridize naturally, producing fertile offspring • This hybridization has been both a boon for plant breeders seeking to introduce perennial traits into sorghum crops and a concern for weed scientists worried about "superweeds" acquiring crop genes In the United States, Johnson Grass is listed as a noxious weed in 19 states, and its seeds are prohibited or restricted in interstate commerce under various state quarantine laws — a testament to its extraordinary invasiveness and the difficulty of eradication once established.

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