Controlling Horseweed (Marestail) After Crop Emergence
URBANA, ILL.
The past several days have
experienced a noticeable
increase in questions
about options to control
marestail after crop emergence.
Many have reported
poor marestail control from
herbicides applied prior to
planting (primarily no-till soybean),
especially when these burndown applications
contained only glyphosate or glyphosate
and 2,4-D. The increasing frequency of
glyphosate-resistant marestail populations, the
rush to plant whenever field conditions were
conducive, and the less-than-ideal environmental
conditions when many burndown applications
were made, have contributed to a
challenging situation for which a good solution
might not be available. Several herbicides can
control emerged marestail plants that are less
than six inches tall, but few herbicides will control
plants that are 12 inches or taller.
The majority of Illinois corn acres receive one
or more tillage operations prior to planting, and
these tillage operations generally control
emerged marestail. However, marestail might be
a problem in corn acres planted with limited or
no preplant tillage. Growth regulator herbicides,
such as dicamba and 2,4-D, can provide
control or suppression of emerged marestail.
Some ALS-inhibiting herbicides also have activity
against marestail, and control is sometimes
improved when (if allowed by label) these herbicides
are tankmixed with dicamba or 2,4-D.
Glufosinate, applied alone or with atrazine in
glufosinate-resistant corn hybrids, is another
option for control. Keep in mind that if glufosinate
was applied as a burndown treatment prior
to corn planting, no in-crop applications of glufosinate
can be made. Foliar-applied HPPD inhibitors
combined with atrazine are other
options that can provide control/suppression of
emerged marestail less than about six inches
tall.
Marestail that survived a burndown herbicide
in no-till soybean can be very difficult to control
after soybean have emerged. Cloransulam or
chlorimuron-containing products can be applied
postemergence to suppress or control
emerged marestail. These products should be
applied after the first soybean trifoliolate has expanded
and before marestail height exceeds 6
inches. These products can be tankmixed with
glyphosate for postemergence applications in
glyphosate-resistant soybean. Glyphosate is an
option for control of glyphosate-sensistive biotypes
and glufosinate is an effective option when
used in glufosinate-resistant (Liberty Link) soybean
varieties. Foliar-applied PPO-inhibiting
herbicides will not control emerged marestail.
Another option to consider is to physically remove
the surviving plants with a hoe, weed
hook, or by pulling them from the soil. Before
summarily dismissing this as a viable option,
remember that marestail plants can be very
competitive with soybean and can produce
around 200,000 seeds per plant that are easily
dispersed long distances by wind. A few plants
that reach maturity this year can produce a sufficient
amount of seed to infest an entire field
within only a couple of seasons. Removing surviving
marestail plants before they produce seed
could save a great deal of time, money, and consternation
in future seasons. Δ
DR. AARON HAGER: Associate Professor, University
of Illinois