Is Your Weed Management Program Effective?
URBANA, ILL.
Take advantage of the elevated view from
your combine cab to survey and assess the
effectiveness of your weed management
program this fall.
“A field free of weeds during harvest is very
desirable and represents an outcome that will
require increased management as weeds continue
to adapt to modern crop production practices,”
said Aaron Hager, University of Illinois
Extension weed specialist.
Many observations have been made recently
that waterhemp and horseweed are frequently
appearing in corn and soybean fields across Illinois.
Hager’s recent field visits have indicated
that seed production on these mature plants
has been successful, suggesting a preharvest
herbicide application may do little to reduce the
viability of these mature seeds.
“There are many reasons that these two particular
weed species have successfully completed
their life cycle in corn and soybean
fields,” he said. “One reason is the occurrence
of herbicide resistance. Glyphosate resistance
in Illinois waterhemp and horseweed populations
is known to occur, and we suspect this
will become increasingly common
in future growing seasons.
“Additionally, resistance to five
different herbicide site-of-action
families has been documented to
occur in Illinois waterhemp populations.
In all instances except one,
these resistance traits can be
transferred by movement of both
pollen and seed.”
Herbicide-resistant populations
generally do not infest an entire
field over the course of a single
growing season. Rather these populations
usually begin as a small
number of plants that survive to
produce seed.
The next season the herbicide-resistant
population may exist as a
patch of weeds encompassing a
small area within the field. Rogueing
these plants from the field before
they produce viable pollen and
seed can help slow the spread of
the herbicide-resistant population
within the field and reduce the
movement of the resistance trait to
other fields, Hager said.
“Female waterhemp
plants have the potential
to produce in excess of one
million seeds per plant, although
that number is
usually much smaller
when the waterhemp
plants have grown under
competitive conditions,” he
said. “If you notice a few
surviving female waterhemp
plants in a field, it
might be a good investment
of time to remove
these plants before they
enter the combine. Combines
can spread weed
seed across a field and
transport seed from one
field to another.”
If a herbicide-resistant
waterhemp population is
present or suspected in a
particular field, consider
harvesting that field last to prevent introducing
the seed from the resistant plants into the combine
and their subsequent movement to other
fields, Hager suggests. Another option is to
avoid patches of weeds during harvest operations.
Δ
Small patches comprised of an individual weed species may
indicate the presence of a herbicide-resistant population.
Photos by Aaron Hager, U of I Extension
Avoiding weed patches during harvest operations can reduce
weed seed transport via harvesting equipment.