'Crucial tipping point' in region's Arum Lily battle

June 9, 2023 BY

Nature Conservation Margaret River Region's Arum Lily Blitz coordinator Mike Griffiths says the group is planning to make the 2023 effort the largest and most impactful push yet to eradicate the invasive species across the region. Picture supplied.

The South West’s annual Arum Lily Blitz is back – with an ambitious goal of signing up a record number of landholders to help eradicate the weed from more bushland than ever before.

Now in its fifth year, Nature Conservation Margaret River Region says the Blitz has reached a crucial tipping point where real wins are being made to bring back bushland and biodiversity from the grip of the toxic and highly invasive introduced weed.

Blitz coordinator Mike Griffiths said the program had grown as more of the community took up the challenge.

“The Arum Lily Blitz has really taken off in the past four years, with more than 1600 landholders across the Margaret River Region joining a whole suite of local on-ground groups and government agencies controlling arums across an area that now exceeds 20,000 hectares,” Mr Griffiths said.

“People are really connecting and taking action – they’re not just talking about it.

“And when people care, great things happen.”

Mr Griffiths said while locals had embraced the Blitz, arum lilies were a tenacious species.

“We need to keep up the fight,” he said.

“We have funding to ramp up the Blitz for two more years, so now is the time to get on board.

“Just one neighbour who doesn’t control arums can let down their entire street or suburb because arums will spread and re-seed from there.”

“Arum lilies aren’t a natural part of the south-west environment. They’re an introduced species from South Africa and are one of the major threats to biodiversity in our region,” Mr Griffiths said.

“They outcompete the unique and colourful wildflowers, degrade forests, choke out understorey vegetation and crucial wildlife habitat with it.”

Nature Conservation’s coordinated, region-wide attacks on the invasive species will be funded by the WA Government’s State Natural Resources Management Program until 2024.

Participants can access free herbicide, information and resources, while Nature Conservation brings together local and state government agencies, businesses and landholders to coordinate arum lily control.

“Using herbicide should always be a last resort to control weeds, but unfortunately when we’re tackling huge patches of arums with hundreds or thousands of plants, the only practical way to deal with them is by using a low-risk herbicide that is specific to arums and certain bulbous plants,” Mr Griffiths said.

“The preferred herbicide is very effective against arums, breaks down quickly in most soils and has minimal environmental impact.

“We’d prefer not to use any herbicide, but doing nothing and watching whole ecosystems being wiped out is far worse for the environment.”

All landholders are urged to join the Blitz, regardless of land size and experience level.

Find out more, register and see how to get your free herbicide at www.natureconservation.org.au