Control Weeds Now For Better Pastures This Summer
PINE BLUFF, ARK.
With no green showing in the pasture, few livestock producers are
thinking about weed control, but now is the ideal time to control
troublesome pasture weeds, says Dr. David Fernandez, Cooperative
Extension Program livestock specialist at the University of Arkansas at
Pine Bluff.
Not only are some weeds toxic to cattle, but also weeds adversely
affect livestock operations in many ways. Weeds compete with desirable
pasture grasses and legumes for nutrients. Some are unpalatable;
livestock will not eat them so less feed is available in the pasture,
says Dr. Fernandez. Some weeds cause injuries or pain if they have
thorns.
“Weed control can be an effective way to increase production by
improving forage availability,” says Dr. Fernandez. Mowing, grazing,
improving soil fertility and herbicide spraying are some of the ways to
control weeds. Mowing should be done in the boot stage before flowers
emerge. Weeds can flower and set seed very quickly. Once the seeds
develop, mowing just spreads them further into pastures.
Some weeds are both palatable and nutritious early in the growth, and
livestock will readily graze them. To control weeds by grazing,
subdivide weedy pastures, and place a high concentration of animals on
one paddock, advises Dr. Fernandez. The animals will eat or trample the
weeds. The grass can recover once the animals are moved to the next
paddock. Grazing should not be used to control weeds toxic to livestock,
warns Dr. Fernandez.
Weeds can outcompete more desirable species under conditions of low
fertility. Most of Arkansas’s better pasture grasses and legumes do
poorly in acidic soils. Phosphate and potash levels in Arkansas soils
tend to be lower than optimum for many forages. Adding lime to control
soil pH and fertilizing according to soil test results can give grasses
and legumes a chance to outcompete the weeds after an initial round of
another control method.
Some common weeds in Arkansas respond well to late winter/early
spring herbicide treatment including buttercup, the first weed to
emerge, wild garlic or wild onion and thistles. Spraying now for
buttercup will prevent pastures from turning yellow with buttercup
flowers this spring. Thistles are best treated in the rosette stage
before he flower stalk begins to grow.
Buttercup.
Images courtesy UAPB
Bitter sneezeweed.
Wooly croton.
Two common, toxic Arkansas weeds, bitter sneezeweed and woolly
croton, are best treated in May and June, says Dr. Fernandez. Extension
publication MP 44 Recommended Chemicals for Weed and Brush Control
contains herbicide recommendations for pasture weeds, and your county
Extension agent can help you choose which herbicide is most appropriate
for the weeds on your farm.∆