Update On Palmer Amaranth Distribution In Illinois
DR. AARON HAGER
URBANA, ILL.
Palmer amaranth (Amaranthus palmeri) has garnered much attention
recently in both academic discussions and popular press releases, and
with good reason. Among the weedy species of Amaranthus, Palmer amaranth
has the fastest growth rate and is the most competitive with the crops
common to Midwest agronomic cropping systems. Soybean yield losses
approaching 80 percent and corn yield losses exceeding 90 percent have
been reported in the peer-reviewed scientific literature. Palmer
amaranth can be effectively managed in Illinois agronomic crops, but the
greatest likelihood for successful management is with systems that
employ multiple effective management tactics. Palmer amaranth is
perhaps the personification of a weed species that requires an
integrated management approach.
Unlike waterhemp, Palmer amaranth is not indigenous to Illinois. Palmer
amaranth evolved as a desert-dwelling species in the southwestern United
States, including areas of the Sonoran Desert. However, genotypic and
phenotypic adaptability have allowed Palmer amaranth to expand its
distribution and colonize the vastly different agricultural landscapes
across much of the eastern half of the United States. The presence of
Palmer amaranth in agricultural landscapes of the eastern United States
is perceived by some to be only a recent phenomenon, but Dr. Jonathan
Sauer, noted expert of Amaranthus taxonomy, noted in 1957 that, “It
looks as if there has been recent and substantial northeastward
expansion of A. palmeri resulting in its present wide area of
cohabitation with interior species,” (Sauer 1957).
Will Palmer amaranth populations, likely introduced by seeds moved into
Illinois from areas where Palmer amaranth has become the dominant
pigweed species, be able to adapt to the landscape and growing
conditions of Illinois? Perhaps a more important question is to define
the damage niche of Palmer amaranth populations in Illinois agronomic
cropping systems.
Recent research conducted in Illinois by Dr. Adam Davis, USDA-ARS plant
ecologist at the University of Illinois, has examined these important
questions. Results from these experiments have demonstrated that there
are few landscape-level barriers to the establishment of Palmer amaranth
populations in Illinois, and that these populations, once established,
are competitive with crop species. In other words, these results
indicate that it’s not a question of if Palmer amaranth will become established in Illinois, but rather when and where it will become established.
For the past two seasons, weed scientists at the University of Illinois
and Southern Illinois University have conducted surveys (field and
laboratory) to determine where in Illinois Palmer amaranth now occurs.
Figure 1 illustrates the current known distribution of Palmer amaranth
in Illinois based on 2012–2013 surveys by university weed scientists.
Palmer amaranth populations have been confirmed in counties colored
orange or blue; orange designates glyphosate-resistant populations are
present in these counties while green designates counties from which
samples have been submitted but analysis was not completed at the time
of publication. It should be neither construed nor assumed that Palmer
amaranth populations occur only in the counties colored on this map. It
is altogether likely that Palmer amaranth populations are present in
many other counties.
Similar to female waterhemp plants, female Palmer amaranth plants
produce an abundance of seeds. These small black seeds are easily moved
within and between fields in myriad ways, including harvesting and
tillage equipment. If you identify Palmer amaranth in one or more
fields, what can you do this fall to limit movement of the seed? The
following suggestions were developed by weed scientists in Illinois to
help curtail the movement of Palmer amaranth seed.
1) Fields with Palmer amaranth populations should be the last fields harvested this fall and the last fields planted next spring.
2) Mark or flag areas where Palmer amaranth plants have produced seed.
These areas should be intensively scouted the following season and an
aggressive Palmer amaranth management plan implemented to prevent future
seed production.
3) Do not mechanically harvest mature Palmer amaranth
plants with crop harvesting equipment. Physically remove the plants
immediately prior to harvest and either leave the plants in the field or
place in a sturdy garden bag and remove the plants from the field. Bury
or burn the bags in a burn barrel as soon as possible.
4) Fields in which Palmer amaranth seeds were produced should NOT be
tilled during the fall or following spring. Leaving the seeds near the
soil surface increases the opportunities for seed predation by various
granivores.
It’s not too early to begin planning an integrated Palmer amaranth
management program. An integrated herbicide program should include
soil-residual herbicides applied at full recommended use rates within
two weeks of planting and followed by postemergence herbicides applied
before Palmer amaranth plants exceed 3 inches tall. Most herbicides that
control waterhemp also control Palmer amaranth, but successful,
long-term management of Palmer amaranth in Illinois will likely require
more than herbicides.∆
DR. AARON HAGER: Associate Professor, University of Illinois