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Weed Biology and Management Everglades REC Belle Glade, FL Weed Biology and its Impact on Management • What makes a plant a weed? – Cost of weeds – Why do weeds always win? Biology • Get to know the enemy – Anatomy of a weed – Common south Florida weeds • Strategies for weed management Definition of a weed • A weed is an undesired plant out of place – Water hyacinth in a aquatic garden: not a weed – Water hyacinth clogging canals: a weed Weed impacts Weeds are costly $24 billion in agricultural crop loss $3 billion in control costs Pimentel et al. 1999 Weeds are costly • It is estimated that without control, sugarcane losses would be 50% from heavy infestations of fall panicum • In 2000, over $51 million was spent for weed control in US sugarcane Why do weeds always win? • Dormancy: broken when conditions favor survival • Rapid early growth and expansion • Early and fast root growth • Efficient uptake and processing of nutrients and water Why do weeds always win? • • • • • • Ability to reproduce early in life cycle Prolific seed production Absorb resources in excess Tolerate low levels of resources Genetic and environmental adaptability Ability to develop resistance to control measures Reproduction by seed • First infestation is dependent on seed • Estimates of the total number of weed seeds in the soil range from 4 million to 133 million per acre furrow slice Vegetative reproduction • Less longevity in soil than seeds • Very small structures can reproduce • Canada thistle: ¼” piece of root results in new plant • Torpedograss can reproduce from very small segments of rhizomes • Can be as prolific as seed production • Yellow nutsedge: 1,900 new plants and 18,000 tubers in one year from one plant Get to know the enemy: weed identification Weed identification goals • Impossible to learn the thousands of weeds found in Florida • Learn the primary weeds • Keep field notes • The goal is to learn how to identify a weed – Plant anatomy – Plant keys Weed classification: life cycles • Annuals- reproduce by seed only • Biennial: – Life cycle completed in two years • Flowering and fruiting in second year • Examples: wild carrot, cudweed • Perrenials: – Simple- reproduce by seed only – Creeping- reproduce by seed and vegetative propagules Differences between grasses and sedges • Sedges have a solid, triangular in cross section, stem. Leaves are arranged in threes (extend in three directions). • Grass stems may be round or flattened. Purple vs Yellow Nutsedge Purple vs Yellow Nutsedge Common Sugarcane Weeds Fall panicum (Panicum dichotomiflorum) • Most common grass in the area • Relatively easy to identify – Stem can be hairy or smooth – Hairy when young – Ligule fringe of hairs – Round stem – Widely dispersed seedhead Fall panicum (Panicum dichotomiflorum) Goosegrass (Eleusine indica) • Found in many fields • Low growing – Very white, flattened stems – Looks like it has been stepped on – Probably not competitive Crabgrass (Digitaria spp.) • Very wide first leaf • Initial clumping growth progressing to prostrate, tillering • Visible membranous ligule • Can be very hairy, or hairless, depending on species Broadleaf panicum (Urochloa adspersa) • Relatively prostrate growth – Wide leaves with wavy margins – Round stems – Usually dark green in color – Very similar to alexandergrass Broadleaf panicum (Urochloa adspersa) Crowfootgrass (Dactyloctenium aegyptium) • Plants glabrous, blade margins hairy • Seed head like a crow foot • Bends and roots at the lower nodes Bermudagrass (Cynodon dactylon) • Easy to identify • • • • Small leaves Rhizomes and stolons Mat forming Ligule fringe of short hairs (hard to see) • Produces seed and spreads vegetatively Bermudagrass (Cynodon dactylon) Sorghum (Sorghum almum) • ‘Wild oat’ • Closely related to johnsongrass – No rhizomes – Large, membranous ligule – Robust plant Sorghum (Sorghum almum) Torpedograss (Panicum repens L.) • Perennial with robust, creeping, sharply pointed rhizomes • Leaf blade stiff and erect • Hairs on upper and lower leaf surface • Seedheads with stiff, ascending branches • Occurs in wet areas Guineagrass (Panicum maximum) • Some plants are extremely hairy, while others are hairless • Small plants have narrow leaves • Becomes very large • Highly branched seedhead • Round stem Napiergrass (Pennisetum pupureum) • Very robust plant – Forms dense clumps in fields – Long, wide leaves with finely toothed margin – Up to 12 feet tall – Seedhead has “bottle brush” appearance Paragrass (Brachiaria mutica) • Prostrate growing, medium size grass – Long stems covered with hairs • Short hairs on leaf surface – Swollen nodes – Grows in very wet areas • Often moves out of ditches – Pasture grass in Africa Spiny amaranth (Amaranthus spinosus) • Most common ‒ Large, upright growth habit, entire leaves ‒ Very evident spines located at nodes Livid amaranth (Amaranthus blitum) • Can be prostrate or erect • Notched leaf tips Alligatorweed (Alternanthera philoxeroides) • Common in wet areas of the EAA ‒ Often spread by cultivation ‒ Low growing • Hollow stems when growing in wet spots • Opposite leaves • Small white blooms Alligatorweed (Alternanthera philoxeroides) Common lambsquarters (Chenopodium album) • Common during the cooler months • Can be difficult to control due to waxy leaf surface that leaves a white-gray color Common purslane (Portulaca oleracea) • Prostrate, succulent • Leaves small, smooth, opposite or alternate • Red stems • Small, yellow flowers Common ragweed (Ambrosia artemisiifolia) • Deeply dissected leaves • Many hairs on upper and lower surfaces • Long seedhead at top of plant • Yellow/white flowers in multiples Ragweed parthenium (Parthenium hysterophorus) • Less common than common ragweed ‒ Common along canals, ditch-banks, noncrop areas • Leaves less deeply dissected ‒ Divisions don’t go all the way to the stem • White flowers ‒ Single, not multiples American black nightshade (Solanum americanum) • Becoming more common in EAA ‒ Alternate leaves • Usually entire to somewhat lobed ‒ Purple fruit Dayflower (Commelina spp.) • Common in open areas, field edges – Small, probably not competitive – Prostrate growth habit – Parallel veins on leaves – Actually a monocot – Blue flowers Weed management strategies Secrets to Successful Weed Control 1. Prevention 2. Prevention 3. Prevention Only you can prevent weed invasion! • • • • Be careful what you plant Consider all points of entry Keep an eye out for new invaders elsewhere Prevent reproduction of early invaders Ecological weed management is based on how a plant is built • Annual vs. biennial vs. perennial • Growth stage – perennials act like annuals for a short period • Timing relative to the seasons • Control prior to seed production Management timing relative to the seasons • Perennial weed growth schedule: – Spring: export carbohydrates from roots to new shoots – Summer: capture and assimilate new energy – Fall: “pack it in” for winter – carbohydrates transported to the roots – Winter: usually, minimal growth or activity Management timing relative to the seasons • Perennial weed management – general terms: – Spring: limit new growth – drain the roots – Summer: prevent energy capture – Fall: opportunity to attack the root storage system – Winter: eliminate new seedlings Manual removal Hoeing, Pulling, Cultivation • Success determined by population and distribution – is it feasible? • Annual weeds easily removed • Perennial plants are often “subdivided” – Vegetative root pieces often produce new plants Biological control • Biological control of weeds in cropping systems is a difficult proposition – The control agent must be very host-specific and not injure non-target species – The life cycle of the control agent must match that of the target species – Surrounding habitat should support control agent survival and reproduction • In the future, possibility of bioherbicides Herbicides • Several good options for most crops grown in EAA • Applications should be timed to minimize competition with crop • Should be made prior to weed seed head formation Contact information Calvin Odero Everglades Research & Education Center 3200 E Palm Beach Road Belle Glade FL, 33430 561-993-1509 [email protected]