Bamboo-zled! Experts warn gardeners about menace of the trendy plant that can shoot up by 5ft every year and is labelled 'the new Japanese knotweed'
- Bamboo has been branded the 'new Japanese knotweed' by garden experts
- The fashionable border adornment can grow by up to five feet in a single year
- Just like Japanese knotweed, bamboo is incredibly difficult to remove
- Some bamboo varieties see their roots spread more than 28 feet from the plant
It has become a fashionable adornment in borders and beside ponds in many suburban gardens.
But bamboo could be the ‘new Japanese knotweed’, experts have warned.
It can grow by 5ft in a year and reach heights of 18ft in Britain, overwhelming gardens and blocking out neighbours’ light like leylandii.
Gardeners have been warned about the threat posed by certain types of bamboo
Experts claim bamboo could become the new Japanese knotweed, pictured
And just like invasive Japanese knotweed, which lowers house prices and puts up insurance, some types of bamboo are extremely difficult to get rid of once they have spread.
Gardeners try in vain to dig bamboo up or cut it back, only to see it return the next season.
It is also feared that bamboo, which has spread from gardens to 40 sites in the Sussex countryside, could pose a threat to native plant species, as knotweed does.
The Property Care Association has raised the issue by presenting a garden planted with bamboo in the Great Pavilion at Chelsea Flower Show. The Enemy Within garden is dedicated to invasive non-native plants, and also includes buddleia, Himalayan balsam and montbretia.
Professor Max Wade, from the trade body, said: ‘Bamboo could be tomorrow’s Japanese knotweed.
‘People who plant bamboo as a screen find it grows into the neighbour’s garden. We have seen someone move house because of bamboo next door which was blocking out their light.
Pandas can eat 83lbs of bamboo a day
‘People don’t realise just how fast some types of bamboo can grow, and it’s an increasing problem.’
Bamboo, which originates in East Asia, came to Britain in the 1800s, but has become particularly fashionable in the past decade. Japanese knotweed was introduced to Britain in the middle of the 19th century, but it did not become a serious problem until around 1940. To prevent a similar problem with bamboo, experts are asking gardeners to ‘think before you plant’.
There are 15 to 20 species available in garden centres but the ‘running’ types of bamboo can take over a garden rapidly. These can grow 3ft to 5ft feet in height a year, with more established plants shooting up even faster.
And their rhizomes – underground plant stems – can spread more than 28ft horizontally and produce roots. People who want to have bamboo in their gardens are advised to choose ‘clumping’ rather than ‘running’ varieties, and to plant it in a container, instead of a flowerbed.
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