sugarcane weed identification and control with herbicides

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Sugarcane Weed Identification and Control with Herbicides Les Baucum Calvin Odero Ron Rice North Florida Research & Education Center Quincy, FL November 7, 2011

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Page 1: Sugarcane Weed Identification and Control with Herbicides

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Sugarcane Weed Identification and Control with Herbicides

Les Baucum

Calvin Odero

Ron Rice

North Florida Research & Education Center

Quincy, FL

November 7, 2011

Page 2: Sugarcane Weed Identification and Control with Herbicides

What is a weed?

• Plant growing where is not wanted

• Plant out of place

• Plant that is a nuisance

• Plant that is undesirable

Page 3: Sugarcane Weed Identification and Control with Herbicides

Weed classification

• Weeds come in all growth forms

• May be classified as

– Grass

– Grass-like (sedge)

– Broadleaf

• Forbs

• Succulents

• Shrubs

Monocots

Dicots

Page 4: Sugarcane Weed Identification and Control with Herbicides

Helpful ID characteristics

• Morphology - structure, shape, and

orientation

– Is it a broadleaf, grass, or sedge?

– Ligule characteristics for grasses

– Inflorescence - if present can make things

easier!!

Page 5: Sugarcane Weed Identification and Control with Herbicides

Leaf type, shape, and texture

Page 6: Sugarcane Weed Identification and Control with Herbicides

Leaf arrangement

Alternate

Opposite

Basal Whorl

Whorled

Page 7: Sugarcane Weed Identification and Control with Herbicides

Root type

Tap Fibrous

Page 8: Sugarcane Weed Identification and Control with Herbicides

Inflorescence

Panicle

Spike

Umbel

Head

Page 9: Sugarcane Weed Identification and Control with Herbicides

Vegetative reproductive structures

Tubers Stolon

Rhizome Plantlets

Page 10: Sugarcane Weed Identification and Control with Herbicides

Monocots: grasses and sedges

Grasses Sedges (Grass-like)

Stems • Hollow or flattened

• Occasionally solid

• Nodes (jointed)

• Solid

• Triangular (3-sided)

• Without nodes

Leaves • Parallel veins

• 2 sides

• Parallel veins

• 3 sides

Flowers • Small

• Inconspicuous

• Small

• Inconspicuous

Example • Goosegrass • Yellow nutsedge

Page 11: Sugarcane Weed Identification and Control with Herbicides
Page 12: Sugarcane Weed Identification and Control with Herbicides

Auricles

Page 13: Sugarcane Weed Identification and Control with Herbicides

Dicots: broadleaf plants

• Two cotyledons

• Primary root often

becomes a strong tap

root with smaller

secondary roots

• Leaves are usually

net veined and broad

at the base with a

petiole or stalk

Page 14: Sugarcane Weed Identification and Control with Herbicides

Dicots: broadleaf plants

Forbs

Shrubs Succulents

Stems • Solid

• Pithy

• Solid

• Growth rings

• Fleshy, thick

• Sharp spines

Leaves • Net-veined • Net-veined • Small, fleshy

• Seldom present

Flowers • Small or large

• Colored

• Showy

• Small

• Showy

• Showy

Example • Common

lambsquarters

• Lantana • Cacti

Page 15: Sugarcane Weed Identification and Control with Herbicides

Sugarcane weed control methods

• Crop competition

– Good stand, rapid & uniform growth, close-in • Shade soils and small weeds

• Mechanical

– Manual i.e. pulling, hand hoeing

– Plowing, disking

• Chemical control

– Herbicides • Soil (PRE) & foliar (POST) applied

Page 16: Sugarcane Weed Identification and Control with Herbicides

Weeds often found in sugarcane and their

control

Page 17: Sugarcane Weed Identification and Control with Herbicides

Crabgrass (Digitaria spp.)

• Very wide first leaf

• Initial clumping growth progressing to

prostrate, tillering

• Visible membranous ligule

• Can be very hairy, or hairless, depending

on species

Page 18: Sugarcane Weed Identification and Control with Herbicides

Crabgrass (Digitaria spp.)

Control

• PRE – Prowl, Atrazine, Metribuzin

• POST – Asulox, Envoke or Asulox + Envoke

• Easier to control when small

Page 19: Sugarcane Weed Identification and Control with Herbicides

Torpedograss (Panicum repens L.)

• Perennial with robust, creeping, sharply pointed rhizomes

• Leaf blade stiff and erect

• Hairs on upper and lower leaf surface

• Seedheads with stiff, ascending branches

• Occurs in wet areas

Page 20: Sugarcane Weed Identification and Control with Herbicides

Torpedograss (Panicum repens L.)

Control

• Rhizome, buds must be destroyed for good control

• Mechanical operations that fracture rhizomes can actually result in increased populations

• Glyphosate (multiple applications) or Arsenal in noncrop areas

Page 21: Sugarcane Weed Identification and Control with Herbicides

Fall panicum (Panicum dichotomiflorum)

• Most common grass in the area

• Relatively easy to identify

– Stem can be hairy or smooth

– Hairy when young

– Ligule fringe of hairs

– Round stem

– Widely dispersed seedhead

Page 22: Sugarcane Weed Identification and Control with Herbicides

Control

• PRE – Prowl, Atrazine, Metribuzin

• POST – Asulox, Envoke or Asulox + Envoke

• Easier to control when small

Fall panicum (Panicum dichotomiflorum)

Page 23: Sugarcane Weed Identification and Control with Herbicides

Wild oat (Sorghum almum)

• Not really an oat

• Closely related to

johnsongrass

– No rhizomes

– Large, membranous

ligule

– Robust plant

Page 24: Sugarcane Weed Identification and Control with Herbicides

Wild oat (Sorghum almum)

Control

• PRE – Prowl, Atrazine, Metribuzin

• POST – Asulox, Envoke or Asulox + Envoke

• Limited experience with S. almum as a specific target

Page 25: Sugarcane Weed Identification and Control with Herbicides

Alexandergrass & Broadleaf panicum

Page 26: Sugarcane Weed Identification and Control with Herbicides

Broadleaf panicum (Urochloa adspersa)

• Relatively prostrate growth – Wide leaves with wavy

margins

– Round stems

– Usually dark green in color

– Very similar to alexandergrass

Page 27: Sugarcane Weed Identification and Control with Herbicides

Broadleaf panicum (Urochloa adspersa)

Control

• PRE - Prowl, Atrazine, Metribuzin

• POST - Asulox or Envoke + Asulam

• Can be difficult

• Much easier to control when small

Page 28: Sugarcane Weed Identification and Control with Herbicides

Alexandergrass (Brachiaria plantaginea)

• Relatively prostrate growth

• Somewhat wide leaves with straight

margins

• Round stems

• Usually light green in color

• Very similar to broadleaf panicum

– Leaves narrower (usually)

– Margins straight rather than wavy (usually)

Page 29: Sugarcane Weed Identification and Control with Herbicides

Alexandergrass (Brachiaria plantaginea)

Control

• PRE - Prowl, Atrazine, Metribuzin

• POST - Asulox or Envoke + Asulox

• Can be difficult to control

• Much easier to control when small

Page 30: Sugarcane Weed Identification and Control with Herbicides

Guineagrass (Panicum maximum)

• Some plants are extremely hairy, while

others are hairless

• Small plants have narrow leaves

• Becomes very large

• Highly branched seedhead

• Round stem

• Can look similar to Sorghum almum

– Sorghum almum shouldn’t be hairy

Page 31: Sugarcane Weed Identification and Control with Herbicides

Guineagrass (Panicum maximum)

Control

• PRE - Prowl, Atrazine, Metribuzin

• POST - Asulox or Envoke + Asulox

• Need a quality surfactant to penetrate hairs

• Can be difficult to control

• Much easier to control when small

Page 32: Sugarcane Weed Identification and Control with Herbicides

Bermudagrass (Cynodon dactylon)

• Easy to identify • Small leaves

• Rhizomes and stolons

• Mat forming

• Ligule fringe of short hairs (hard to see)

• Produces seed and spreads vegetatively

Page 33: Sugarcane Weed Identification and Control with Herbicides

Bermudagrass (Cynodon dactylon)

Control

• PRE - Prowl can suppress from seed

• No selective POST control

• Must be controlled during fallow with multiple applications of glyphosate

Page 34: Sugarcane Weed Identification and Control with Herbicides

Goosegrass (Eleusine indica)

• Found in many fields

• Low growing

– Very white, flattened

stems

– Looks like it has been

stepped on

– Probably not

competitive

Page 35: Sugarcane Weed Identification and Control with Herbicides

Goosegrass (Eleusine indica)

Control

• PRE - Prowl, Atrazine, Metribuzin

• POST - Asulox or Envoke + Asulox

• Much easier to control when small

Page 36: Sugarcane Weed Identification and Control with Herbicides

Pigweeds

(Amaranthus spp.) • Spiny amaranth is most

common – Large, upright growth

habit, entire leaves

– Very evident spines located at nodes

• Livid amaranth – Can be prostrate or erect

– Notched leaf tips

Page 37: Sugarcane Weed Identification and Control with Herbicides

Alligatorweed (Alternanthera philoxeroides)

• Common in wet areas

of the EAA

– Often spread by

cultivation

– Low growing

• Hollow stems when

growing in wet spots

• Opposite leaves

• Small white blooms

Page 38: Sugarcane Weed Identification and Control with Herbicides

Common lambsquarters (Chenopodium album)

• Common during the

cooler months

– Dec, Jan

• Can be difficult to

control due to waxy

leaf surface that

leaves a white-gray

color

Page 39: Sugarcane Weed Identification and Control with Herbicides

Common purslane (Portulaca oleracea)

• Probably not competitive

• Prostrate, succulent

• Leaves small, smooth, opposite or alternate

• Red stems

• Small, yellow flowers

Page 40: Sugarcane Weed Identification and Control with Herbicides

Common ragweed (Ambrosia artemisiifolia)

• Deeply dissected leaves

• Many hairs on upper and

lower surfaces

• Long seedhead at top of

plant

• Yellow/white flowers in

multiples

Page 41: Sugarcane Weed Identification and Control with Herbicides

Ragweed parthenium

(Parthenium hysterophorus)

• Less common than common ragweed

– Common along canals, ditch-banks, noncrop areas

• Leaves less deeply dissected

– Divisions don’t go all the way to the stem

• White flowers

– Single, not multiples

Page 42: Sugarcane Weed Identification and Control with Herbicides

Ragweed parthenium

(Parthenium hysterophorus)

Page 43: Sugarcane Weed Identification and Control with Herbicides

Dayflower (Commelina spp.)

• Common in open

areas, field edges

– Small, probably not

competitive

– Prostrate growth habit

– Parallel veins on

leaves

– Actually a monocot

– Blue flowers

Page 44: Sugarcane Weed Identification and Control with Herbicides

American black nightshade

(Solanum americanum)

• Becoming more

common in EAA

– Alternate leaves

• Usually entire

to somewhat

lobed

– Purple fruit

– Seems quite

competitive

Page 45: Sugarcane Weed Identification and Control with Herbicides

Control of broadleaf weeds

• PRE- most can be controlled with Atrazine,

Metribuzin, and Evik

• POST - 2,4-D or Dicamba work well for most

• POST – Atrazine + Callisto works well too

• Envoke can be used for control of most

pigweeds, ragweed, and lambsquarters

• Sandea can suppress dayflower and control

spiny amaranth and common lambsquarters

Page 46: Sugarcane Weed Identification and Control with Herbicides

Purple vs. yellow nutsedge

Page 47: Sugarcane Weed Identification and Control with Herbicides

Purple vs. yellow nutsedge

Page 48: Sugarcane Weed Identification and Control with Herbicides

Nutsedge control

• Can be suppressed (burned down) with

2,4-D or 2,4-D in combination with Evik

• Envoke, Sandea, and Yukon provide

excellent systemic control

Page 49: Sugarcane Weed Identification and Control with Herbicides

Herbicide program: plant cane

• Fallow

– Start with clean, weed free field – 2 to 3

applications of glyphosate during the fallow

period

– Prior to planting, disk until soil is well worked

• Successive

– Multiple diskings until soil is well worked

Page 50: Sugarcane Weed Identification and Control with Herbicides

Herbicide program: plant cane

• PRE

– Prowl + Atrazine

• Prowl = Prowl H20 : muck soils = up to 8.4 pts/acre;

otherwise 6.2 pts/acre)

– No POST activity; apply shortly after planting

– Will need to be incorporated into the soil (preferably by

rain or irrigation

• Atrazine 4L = 4-8 pts/acre/application

• Atrazine 90DF = 2.2-4.4 lbs/acre/application)

• POST

– Atrazine + 2,4-D (or Dicamba, or 2,4-D Dicamba mix)

Page 51: Sugarcane Weed Identification and Control with Herbicides

Herbicide program: stubble cane

• PRE

– Prowl + Atrazine

• Prowl = Prowl H20 : muck soils = up to 8.4 pts/acre;

otherwise 6.2 pts/acre)

– No POST activity; apply shortly after harvest

– Will need to be incorporated into the soil (preferably by

rain or irrigation

• Atrazine 4L = 4-8 pts/acre/application

• Atrazine 90DF = 2.2-4.4 lbs/acre/application)

• POST

– Atrazine + 2,4-D (or Dicamba, or 2,4-D Dicamba mix)

Page 52: Sugarcane Weed Identification and Control with Herbicides

Thank you