Sporobolus alterniflorus can become an
invasive plant outside its native range, either by itself or by hybridizing with native species and interfering with the propagation of the pure native strain. The grass can hinder water circulation and
drainage or block boating channels. Meadows of
S. alterniflorus can crowd out native species, reducing
biodiversity and altering the environment; as a result of
S. alterniflorus growth,
invertebrates that live in
mud flats disappear as their
habitat is overgrown, and in turn, food sources shrink for birds who feed on those invertebrates. One example of an invasive
Sporobolus alterniflorus hybrid is that of
Sporobolus anglicus.
S. anglicus is a fertile
polyploid derived from the
hybrid S.alterniflorus ×
townsendii (
S. alterniflorus ×
S. maritimus), first found when American
S. alterniflorus was introduced to southern
England in about 1870 and came into contact with the local native
S. maritimus.
S. anglica has a variety of traits that allow it to outcompete native plants, including a high
saline tolerance and the ability to perform
photosynthesis at lower temperatures more productively than other similar plants. It can grow on a wider range of
sediments than other species of the genus
Sporobolus, and can survive
inundation in
salt water for longer periods of time.
S. anglicus has since spread throughout northwest Europe, and (following introduction for erosion control) eastern North America. The world's largest invasion of
Sporobolus alterniflorus is in China, where plants from multiple North American locations were intentionally planted starting in 1979 with the intention of providing shore protection and sediment capture. The invasion has spread to over 34,000 hectares in ten provinces and Hong Kong. In
Willapa Bay of
Washington state,
Sporobolus alterniflorus was probably an accidental introduction during oyster transplants during the nineteenth century and may have dispersed from there to other parts of the state. At its peak of infestation in 2003, it covered approximately 3,000 hectares (more than 8,500 acres), spread across an area of . As of 2016, the infestation had been reduced to less than 3 solid hectares (7 acres). In
California, four species of exotic
Sporobolus (
S. alterniflorus,
S. densiflora,
S. patens, and
S. anglicus) have been introduced to the San Francisco Bay region.
Sporobolus alterniflorus is well established in San Francisco Bay, and has had the greatest impact of all the cordgrasses in San Francisco Bay. It was introduced in 1973 by the Army Corps of Engineers in an attempt to reclaim marshland, and was spread and replanted around the bay in further restoration projects. It demonstrated an ability to outcompete the native
S. foliosa, and to potentially eliminate it from San Francisco Bay.
Sporobolus alterniflorus has also been found to hybridize with
S. foliosa, producing offspring
Sporobolus alterniflorus ×
S. foliosa that may be an even greater threat than
S. alterniflorus by itself. The hybrid can physically modify the environment to the detriment of native species, and the hybrid populations have spread into
creeks,
bays, and more remote coastal locations. The hybrids produce enormous amounts of pollen, which swamp the stigmas of the native
S. foliosa flowers to produce even larger numbers of hybrid offspring, leaving the affected native
Sporobolus species little chance to produce unhybridized offspring. The hybrids also produce much larger numbers of fertile seeds than the native
Sporobolus species, and are producing a hybrid population that, left unchecked, can increase not only in population size but also in its rate of population growth. Taller than either of the parent species, the hybrid provides good shelter to
Ridgway's rail, an occasional roadblock to its eradication. Several means of control and eradication have been employed against
Sporobolus alterniflorus where it has become a
pest. Hand pulling is ineffective because even small
rhizome fragments that inevitably break off and get left in the soil are capable of sending up new shoots.
Imazapyr, an
herbicide, is approved for aquatic use and is used effectively in Washington and California to kill it. In Willapa Bay, leafhopper bugs (
Prokelisia marginata) were employed to kill the plants, which threaten the
oyster industry there, but this method did not contain the invasion. Surveys by air, land, and sea are conducted in infested and threatened areas near San Francisco to determine the spread of
Sporobolus species. ==References==