Transcript Slide 1
Developed by:
Susan Donaldson
University of Nevada Cooperative Extension
UNCE, Reno, Nev.
What is a weed?
Why worry about weeds?
How weeds are regulated?
Weed biology
Factors that lead to plant invasion
Preventing invasion and spread of weeds
Identifying weeds
Control - mechanical, cultural, biological, and
chemical
Common weeds in your area
What’s a weed?
USDA-ARS
Invasive weed spread
Weed
Annual Spread
Reduced Grazing
Dyers woad
14%
38%
Canada thistle
10%
42%
Dalmation toadflax
8%
46%
Tall whitetop
9%
55%
Leafy spurge
12%
59%
Yellow starthistle
17%
65%
Spotted knapweed
24%
80%
UNCE, Reno, Nev.
Decreased grazing
potential
Economic losses
from refusals of
hay shipments
Decreased crop
yields
Cost of control
UNCE, Reno, Nev.
Decreased
UNCE, Reno, Nev.
property
values
Loss of wildlife and
fish habitat
Impairment of
wetland functions
Increased erosion
Toxicity
Damaging to the economy or environment
Difficult to control
Dominate sites
How weeds grow
Dicot
(Broadleaf)
•Two true leaves
• Broad leaves have
net-like veins
•Coarse tap root
Monocot
(Grass)
•One seed leaf
•Parallel veins
•Fibrous roots
Annual
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Summer annuals
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One season for all stages
of development
Produce foliage, flower
seeds, then die
Live from spring to fall
Examples:
◦ foxtail, pigweed
Winter annuals
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Germinate in fall and winter
Examples:
◦ cheatgrass and mustard
UNCE, Reno, Nev.
Yellow starthistle
Biennials
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Require two seasons for
completion of life cycle
First year: develop roots
and low-growing leaves
Second year: flowers,
sets seed and matures
Examples are mullein and
musk thistle
UNCE, Reno, Nev.
Musk thistle
Perennials
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Live more than two years
Will produce foliage, seed,
and reach maturity each year
Examples:
perennial pepperweed
Canada thistle
UNCE, Reno, Nev.
Dandelion
Annuals and biennials
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Seed
Seed bank
Perennials
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Simple: Reproduce by seed and pieces of root
◦ dandelions
Bulbous: Produce seed, bulblets and bulbs
◦ wild onion
Creeping: Produce seeds, rhizomes (underground
stems), stolons (above ground stems), or creeping
roots
◦ pepperweed
UNCE, Reno, Nev.
NRCS, Bozeman, Mont.
Spotted knapweed
Tumble mustard
Dandelion
Yellow starthistle
They are very competitive
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Grow well in spite of interference from other
plants
They take advantage of the characteristics of
sites, including:
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Exposed or disturbed soil (grading road shoulders)
Turfgrass, range, pasture or groundcover that is
weakened by disease, pests, or poor management
Places where a desired species is not well-adapted
to its environment
UNCE, Reno, Nev.
They are persistent
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Will return year
after year
Reproduce
vigorously
Spread seeds
effectively
UNCE, Reno, Nev.
They are harmful
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UNCE, Reno, Nev.
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Can alter the site
they grow in by
accumulating salts,
changing water
table depths,
increasing erosion,
increasing wildfire
frequency,
Etc.
UNCE, Reno, Nev.
Natural means
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Wind
Water
Animals
Humans
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Irrigation
Roadside shoulder work
Construction/ fill dirt
Vehicles
Tillage
Contaminated seed or feed
Livestock management
IPM is a sustainable approach to
managing pests that combines
biological, cultural, physical and
chemical tools in a way that
minimizes economic, health, and
environmental risks
Hand
removal
of weeds
UC Davis
Sticky traps and other
physical traps/barriers
Planning
Setting
action thresholds
Monitoring and detection
Identification
Implementation
Evaluation
Prevention
Eradication
Mechanical controls
Cultural controls
Biological controls
Chemical controls
CONSIDER THE:
Identity of the weed
Biology of the weed
Extent of the problem
Environmental conditions of the site
Ultimate objectives for the site
Most economical solution
UNCE, Reno, Nev.
Plant clean, weed-free seed
Avoid spreading weed seeds with manure
Sanitize tillage and harvest equipment prior
to moving them from one field to another
Plant and maintain desirable plant species
Consider crop rotation to slow weed spread
Minimize soil disturbance
and bare ground
Don’t overgraze pastures
Apply the appropriate
amount of water
Avoid driving in weedinfested areas
USDA NRCS
Don’t transport flowering plants that
you cannot identify
Pull small patches before seed is formed
Carefully remove weeds that have
flowered
Report new infestations
Removal of all weeds of a given species
from an area so they will not recur
unless reintroduced
Must deplete seed bank of viable weed
seeds by controlling all seedlings
Only feasible for small, new invasions
Must revegetate the area
Cultivation
Hoeing
Bulldozing
Burning
Hand pulling
Mowing
Mulching
Solarizing (use clear
plastic for maximum
affect)
Repeated tillage can
help reduce seed
populations
UNCE, Reno, Nev.
CSUCE
UNCE, Reno, Nev.
Cultural control involves using land
management tools that make it
difficult for weeds to be successful
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Shading
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Water and nutrient management
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Correct seeding rates
Biological control is the
use of one organism to
suppress another
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Can reduce pesticide use
Agents can be free or
purchased
Can effectively and
economically suppress
pests
Does not eradicate a weed
UNCE, Reno, Nev.
Characteristics of
successful biocontrol
agents:
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Prolific
Thrive and become
widespread in all habitats and
climates that the pest weed
occupies.
Good colonizers of new
areas.
NDOA
Leaf eating beetle
(Diorhabda elongata)
on tamarisk
http://www.tamariskcoalition.org/
NDOA
UNCE, Reno, Nev.
CSUCE
Herbicides
Managed grazing
Prevention
Dense vegetation,
no bare spots
Proper fertility
and species
USDA NRCS
Herbicide
Fungicide
Insecticide
Glyphosate
Trade or brand name
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N-(phosphonomethyl)glycine
Common name
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Rodenticide
…
Chemical name
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RoundUp, Aquamaster,
Glypro, Rodeo, etc.
Brand
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Monsanto
www.scotts.com
The goals for the site
The site conditions
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Accessibility
Proximity to surface water
Depth to groundwater
Presence of rare species
Effectiveness against
target species
Behavior in the
environment
Toxicity
Safety
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Identify the weeds
Determine their life cycles
Consider all control alternatives
Select the chemical based on
effectiveness, safety, and price
Read the label carefully and make
sure the herbicide is labeled for the
pest and the site
Determine the best time to apply the
chemical
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Is the chemical restricted-use-only?
Consider proximity to water, nearby trees or
shrubs, soil composition, tendency to
contaminate water supplies
Check the weather
Have you read the MSDS?
Are you applying the appropriate amount by
the best method?
Do you understand all safety requirements,
and have you followed them carefully? (PPE)
Caution
Less toxic
Warning
Danger
More toxic
Interfere with or disrupt biochemical or
physiological processes in susceptible plants
Often affect a specific enzyme or reaction
Example: amino acid inhibitors - glyphosate
Selective
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Kills only a specific
plant or type of plant
Most common types
are broadleaf vs. grass
Examples
2,4-D
of selective herbicides
(Weed-b-Gone, Weedar 64)
picloram (Tordon, retricted use, persistent)
chlorsulfuron (Telar, Glean)
triclopyr (Garlon 3A)
ALWAYS READ AND FOLLOW THE
LABEL DIRECTIONS!
USDA NRCS
Kills most or all of the vegetation in the area
covered
May be pre-mergent or postemergent
chemicals
Examples of nonselective herbicides
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glyphosate (Roundup)
imazapyr (Arsenal; use pre-emergence or
postemergence; has a long residual in high pH soil)
ALWAYS READ AND FOLLOW THE
LABEL DIRECTIONS!
Select the most effective
treatment methods for
the site
If herbicides are used, be
sure the label allows
application adjacent to or
in the water
Consider wipe
application to minimize
spray drift
UNCE, Reno, Nev.
Go home and inventory and identify the
weeds on your property
Why do you have a weed problem?
What can you change about the way you
manage your property to decrease weeds?
Determine the most appropriate controls for
the site
Make weed management plan
Start working!
Monitor your property for weeds on a
continual basis
CSUE