Title: Integrated Weed Management
1Integrated Weed Management
2What Is a Weed?
- Any plant that is a hazard, nuisance, or causes
injury to man, his animals, or his desired crops.
3How Weeds Are Troublesome
- Parasitism - Plant obtains resources directly
from another plant
4How Weeds Are Troublesome
- Allelopathy Release of compounds from one plant
that are phytotoxic to other plants
5How Weeds Are Troublesome
- Allelopathy
- Examples
- Black walnut -Barley
- Purslane -Rye
- Ragweed -Sorghum
- Crabgrass -Wheat
6How Weeds Are Troublesome
- Competition Plants seek resource(s) that are
available in limited supply
7How Weeds Are Troublesome
- Compete with crop for
- Light
- Water
- Nutrients
- CO2
- Space
- Alternative hosts
- Insects
- Diseases
8Competitive Index (CI)
- Species CI Species CI
- Cocklebur 5.5 Velvetleaf 4.2
- Kochia 2.5 Waterhemp 2.5
- Lambsquarter 1.5 Barnyardgrass 0.3
- Nightshade sp. 3.5 Crabgrass 0.5
- Pigweed 2.5 Fall Panicum 0.4
- Ragweed 4.5 Foxtail 1.0
- Smartweed 1.5 Sandbur 0.4
9How Weeds Are Troublesome-Alternative Hosts-
- Disease Verticillium wilt
- Hosts Velvetleaf, Nightshades
10Verticillium Wilt Susceptible Plants
- Acer, Aesculus, Amelanchier, Berberis, Buxus,
Catalpa, Cercis, Cotinus, Eleagnus angustifolia,
Fraxinus, Gymnocladus, Ligustrum, Liriodendron
tulipifera, Lonicera, Magnolia, Prunus,
Rhododendron, Rhus, Robinia, Rosa, Spriaea,
Syringa, Ulmus, Viburnum, Weigela
11How Weeds Are Troublesome
Mature Plants
Seed Rain
Emergence
Seedbank
Other Sources (wind, machinery, etc.)
Decay Predation
Other losses (machinery, erosion, etc.)
12Weed Seed Predation
of seedbank
13Seed Production Potential
- Redroot Pigweed 230,000
- Common Lambsquarter 38,000
- PA Smartweed 6,500
- Eastern Black Nightshade 40,000
- Giant Foxtail 4,000
- Wooly Cupgrass 40,000
14Seed Production Potential
- Velvetleaf / m2 Seed produced / plant
- 1 3706
- 5 2152
- 10 1327
- 30 452
15Dormancy
- Prevention of germination under conditions
favorable for seedling growth - Primary dormancy (innate) dormancy present
following seed shed - Secondary dormancy (induced) result of
unfavorable environment
16Dormancy Mechanisms
- Physical impermeable seed coat
- Physiological growth inhibitors
- Morphological immature embryo
17Seed Longevity
- Many weed seeds have the potential to survive
long periods in soil however, - Majority of seeds are lost within 2-3 years after
production - Estimated that 2/3 of seedbank turns over annually
18Longevity of Seed After Burial
19Impact of Seedbank on Weed Management
- Levels of inputs to control weeds is directly
related to seedbank size - Seed production by weeds needs to be considered
in management decisions - What is an acceptable level of seed production?
20Seedbank Sampling?
- Costly Time Consuming!
- Seedling Emergence Method
21Annual Weeds
22Annual Weeds
23Biennial Weeds
- 2 year life cycle
- Year 1
- Germinate
- Develop large root systems and compact cluster of
leaves - Year 2
- Mature, produce seed, die
24Perennial Weeds
- Tap roots
- Have multiple buds at the crown region and upper
portions of the root - Common dandelion, curly dock
- Species with tap roots tend to be prolific seed
producers
25Perennial Weeds
- Creeping roots
- modified roots
- resource gathering
- food storage
- reproduction from buds
- Canada thistle, hemp dogbane, common milkweed,
field and hedge bindweed
26Perennial Weeds
- Rhizomes
- underground stems with buds at the nodes that
produce adventitious roots and shoots - most perennial monocots and sporophytes spread by
rhizomes - quackgrass, wirestem muhly, field horsetail
27Perennial Weeds
- Tubers
- enlarged storage organs
- formed at the end of rhizomes on some plants
- yellow nutsedge, Jerusalem artichoke
28Weed Distribution
- Duration of species of species
- Annual 170 34
- Annual or winter annual 40 8
- Annual or biennial 20 4
- Biennial 35 7
- Biennial or perennial 10 2
- Perennial 225 45
- total 500 species 100
29Integrated Weed Management
- Using all the available tools to manage weeds in
an economical and environmentally safe manner - tools
- Biological
- Cultural
- Chemical
30Biological Control
- Use of a weeds natural enemies for its control
- Purple Loosestrife European Weevil Root Damage
by larvae
31Cultural Control
32Cultural Control
33Cultural Control
- Crop Competition
- booster crops competitive ability
- optimize resources
- optimize planting density
- adjust planting dates
- crop rotation
- drip irrigation
- steam sterilization or fumigation
34Cultural Control
35Chemical Control
- betasan casoran dacthal
- finale fusilade gallery
- goal kerb lasso
- pendulum princep roundup
- rout sharpshooter snapshot
- surflan treflan etc.
- Always check the label!
36Herbicides
- preplant / preemergence / postemergence
- foliar applications
- contact vs. systemic
- selective vs. non-selective
- factors affecting uptake
- pubescence
- epicuticular wax
- dew
37Herbicides
- Soil applied herbicides
- factors influencing effectiveness
- depth of weed seed
- placement / depth of herbicide
- amount of sand / silt / clay / organic matter
- amount and time of rainfall / irrigation
38Soil Applied Herbicides
- Factors affecting persistence
- microbial degredation
- chemical degredation
- adsorption
- leaching
- volatilization
- photodecomposition
39Herbicide Injury
40Herbicide Injury
- Carryover
- Crop Stage
- Tank contamination
- Incorrect adjuvant
- Incorrect rate / calibration
- Environment
- temperature
- rain / irrigation
- soil ph
- amount of sun following application
41Herbicide Injury
- Problems will arise
- Following the label will minimize suprises
42Grass Weed Identification
leaf blade
ligule
collar region
auricles
leaf sheath
43Broadleaf Weed Identification
alternate leaves opposite leaves
44Broadleaf Weed Identification
Ochrea thin paper-like sheath surrounding stem
at leaf axil Found on Wild Buckwheat,
Pennsylvania Smartweed, Ladysthumb Smartweed
45Barnyardgrass
- Annual
- Leaf sheath blade hairless
- Flattened stem
- No ligule
46Barnyardgrass
- Flattened stem (cross-section)
47Yellow Foxtail
- Annual
- Long hairs on upper leaf surface near base of
leaf blade - Hairy ligule
48Giant Foxtail
- Annual
- Larger seedheads that tend to droop
- Upper leaf surface with short bristly hairs
- Hairy ligule
49Giant Foxtail
- Note hairy ligule, hair on leaf sheath margin,
and hairs on leaf surface
50Green Foxtail
- Annual
- Short seedhead
- Hairy ligule
- Leaf surface generally smooth
51Green Foxtail
- Thin hairy ligule
- Hair on leaf sheath margin
52Wild Proso Millet
- Annual
- Seedling often looks like corn plant
- Hairy ligule
- Shiny seeds tan to black
53Wild Proso Millet
- Hairy ligule
- Bristly hairs on leaf sheath margin
54Large Crabgrass
- Annual
- Membranous ligule
- Smooth stems
- Ability to root at nodes
55Large Crabgrass
- Membranous ligule
- Leaf blade and sheaths hairy
56Quackgrass
- Perennial
- Leaf sheath blade nearly hairless
- Short membanous ligule
- Clasping auricles
57Quackgrass
- Extensive rhizome system from a single plant
58Wild Buckwheat
- Annual
- Heart shaped pointed leaves
- Triangular seeds
- Ochrea present
59Wild Buckwheat
- Ochrea (hairless) at leaf axil
60Ladysthumb Smartweed
- Annual
- Alternate leaf pattern
- Ochrea (papery sheath) with fringe of hairs
61Ladysthumb Smartweed
- Stem bent back to expose ochrea with a fringe of
hairs
62Pennsylvania Smartweed
- Annual
- Alternate leaf pattern
- Ochrea (papery sheath) without a fringe of hairs
63Pennsylvania Smartweed
64Field Bindweed
- Perennial
- 3-cornered triangualar leaves
- Deep spreading root system
65Field Bindweed
- Note leaf shape and flowers
66Hedge Bindweed
- Perennial
- Leaves tend to be more 5 cornered than field
bindweed - Shallow extensive root system
67Hedge Bindweed
- Extensive but relatively shallow rhizomes lead to
quickly developing patches of bindweed
68Eastern Black Nightshade
- Annual
- First leaves have purple undersides
- Similar to pigweed when young but no notch at tip
of leaf - Prolific producer of berries that turn from green
to purple to black
69Bitter Nightshade
- Perennial
- Produces woody tissue
- Young leaves
- Older leaves
- Berries that turn from green to red
70Redroot Pigweed
- Annual
- Leaves have small notch at tip
- Petioles generally have purple coloration
71Prostrate Pigweed
- Annual
- Glossy small leaves
- Red petiole coloration
- Spreads out along soil surface
72Common Ragweed
- Annual
- Finely divided lacy leaves
- Very thick cotyledons
73Giant Ragweed
- Annual
- Mature leaves are 3-lobed
- Mature height up to 15 feet
74Broadleaf Plantain
- Perennial
- Low growing
- Broad, simple leaves
- Common in lawns, often in shaded areas
75Velvetleaf
- Annual
- Alternate heart shaped leaves with serrated
margins - Stem and leaves densely hairy
76Common Lambsquarters
- Annual
- First 2 leaves are opposite, later leaves are
alternate - Cotyledons and leaves covered with white, mealy
granules
77Ground Ivy
- Perennial
- Often referred to as creeping charlie
- Small bluish-purple flowers borne in leaf axils
78Common Purslane
- Annual
- Opposite leaves with each pair rotated around the
stem 90o from previous pair - Thick fleshy leaves w/o hair
- Red prostrate stems
79Pineappleweed
- Annual
- Stems smooth
- Leaves finely divided, smell like pineapple when
bruised - Greenish-yellow flowers
80Common Yellow Woodsorrel
- Perennial or annual
- Stems hairy, may root at joints
- Leaves with long petioles, divided into 3
heart-shaped leaflets
81Jimsonweed
- Annual
- Leaves are smooth and alternate
- Hypocotyl (stem below cotyledons) is very hairy
- Plant has unpleasant odor when crushed
82Jimsonweed
- Seed pod
- Leaf shape
- Large white flowers
83Carpetweed
- Annual
- Smooth green stems branching along ground forming
circular mat - Leaves in circles of 5 or 6 at each joint of stems
84Common Mouse-ear Chickweed
- Annual
- Pictured left-common, right-mouse-ear
- Petioles with line of hairs on one side
85Jerusalem Artichoke
- Perennial
- Fibrous roots with rhizomes and tubers at tips
- Hairy stems up to 9 foot
- Leaves very hairy
- 2-3 inch yellow flowers similar to sunflower
86Jerusalem Artichoke
87Jerusalem Artichoke
- Large roots and tubers contain extensive energy
reserves (hard to kill)
88Bull Thistle
- Biennial
- First leaves are oval with a rough, bumpy surface
- Adult leaves form rosette, with dense hairs on
undersides
89Musk Thistle
- Biennial
- Adult leaves forming rosette with whitish margin
- Dense hairs on leaf upper and lower surfaces
90Canada Thistle
- Perennial
- Leaves are alternate with crinkled edges and
spiny margins - Spreads with rhizomes
91Canada Thistle
- Note very wavy leaf margin
92Canada Thistle
- Rhizomes often lead to thick patches