Specialist Offers Tips For Fall Weed Control
URBANA, ILL.
Post-harvest herbicide application provides
an additional opportunity to manage problematic
weed species including winter annuals,
biennials, and perennials, said
University of Illinois associate professor of weed
science Aaron Hager.
“Be sure to scout fields before making any application
to determine what weeds are present
and if their densities are high enough to warrant
treatment,” he advised. “Many herbicides
used prior to or after crop planting/emergence
can be used in the fall, but not all herbicides are
labeled for fall application. Also, some herbicides
approved for fall application have application
timing restrictions.”
Herbicides that do not have much soil-residual
activity (for example, 2,4-D or glyphosate)
should be applied after the majority of winter
annual species have emerged. A mid- to late-October
application might be more effective than
one in early October. However, if the fall application
will include a herbicide with soil-residual
activity, it can be applied earlier.
Horseweed/marestail (Conyza canadensis)
populations are increasing in minimum and notillage
cropping systems across much of the
southern two-thirds of Illinois. Horseweed completes
its life cycle in one year, but unlike many
other annual species, it may exist as a winter or
summer annual.
Winter annual horseweed populations typically
emerge in the fall, within a few days or
weeks after seed is dispersed from the parent
plant. In northern Illinois, most horseweed has
a winter annual life cycle. A substantially higher
proportion of spring emergence occurs in areas
(approximately) south of Interstate 70. Both
winter and summer annual life cycles can be
found across central Illinois.
With the increasing prevalence of horseweed,
including glyphosate-resistant populations, fall
herbicide applications may work better than
spring applications. Glyphosate alone may not
provide adequate control no matter when applied,
but a higher application rate of products
(such as 2,4-D) can be used in fall than in
spring.
“We do not recommend fall herbicide applications
as a method to provide residual control of
summer annual weed species,” Hager said.
Applying soil-residual herbicides fairly close
to, instead of several weeks (or months) prior to,
planting can improve control of summer annual
species, such as waterhemp. If a soil-residual
herbicide will be part of a fall herbicide application,
use an application rate that will provide
control of winter annuals throughout the rest of
2012. “We recommend against increasing the
application rate with the idea of controlling
summer annual species next spring,” Hager
said. Δ