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Broadleaf Weeds
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Updated: November 1, 2024
Herbicide Spray Tank Check Charts for Corn and Soybean
As planting gets underway, it is important to stay on top of our most troublesome weeds. In particular, marestail/horseweed, common ragweed, and Palmer amaranth. Below are two new charts to help determine the type of products to be included in the tank mix to best manage these weeds in corn and soybean.
Updated: November 1, 2024
Time to Pull Palmer Amaranth
Lately, I have seen several fields with Palmer amaranth flowers (Figure 1). It is imperative that these plants be managed before harvest (Palmer amaranth is listed as a noxious weed in Maryland and Delaware). At this point, mowing or herbicides will not improve yield nor prevent Palmer from germinating next year. Plants need to be physically removed from fields. Palmer amaranth has both male and female flowers on separate plants (Figure 2), and focus should be placed on removing the seed-producing females first. A single female can produce approximately 600,000 seeds per plant, and these seeds can remain viable for six years. Palmer seed matures within 2 weeks of flowering and if left unchecked, a single plant can infest an entire field within a few years (Figure 3).
Updated: November 1, 2024
Spring-Seeded Grass Cover Crops in Watermelon Production
Commercially acceptable weed control is difficult to achieve in plasticulture vegetables even with pre- and post-emergent herbicide applications. These applications often do not provide season long weed control between rows. Moreover, several weed species have become resistant to commonly used postemergence herbicides, including common ragweed and pigweed species. Cover crops are an additional tool that could be successfully integrated into a weed management program.
Updated: November 1, 2024
Options for Postemergence Common Ragweed Control in Enlist E3 Soybean
In Maryland, populations of common ragweed have developed resistance to three herbicide groups, Group 9 (glyphosate), Group 2 (FirstRate, Synchrony), and Group 14 (Flexstar, Valor). These herbicide-resistant populations limit options for effective postemergence control. Even though alternative herbicides are available, control can be inconsistent when applied to common ragweed plants exceeding 4” tall (Figure 1).
Updated: November 1, 2024
Managing Herbicide Resistant Common Ragweed Emergence and Growth in Soybean With Cover Crops and Residual Herbicides
Herbicide resistant common ragweed (Ambrosia artemisiifolia L.) is prevalent on the Lower Eastern Shore of Maryland and other areas in the region. In 2019, common ragweed populations on the Eastern Shore of Maryland and Delaware were found to have two or three-way mode-of-action resistance to herbicides. They were resistant to glyphosate (group 9), cloransulam (Firstrate; group 2 “ALS inhibitors”), and/or fomesafen (Reflex; group 14 “PPO Inhibitors”). Early-season management of common ragweed is strongly dependent upon reducing seed emergence and controlling ragweed populations prior to soybean planting. However, due to the limited herbicides with efficacy against common ragweed, it is even more critical to utilize alternative and multiple means of control.
Updated: November 1, 2024
Vinegar: An Alternative to Glyphosate?
Pros and cons of vinegar as an alternative to glyphosate
Updated: November 1, 2024
Poison Hemlock Identification and Management
Poison Hemlock (Conium maculatum, Fig. 1), is a member of the plant family Apiaceae, which contains a few important crops such as carrots, celery, and parsnips. This weed is a tall, invasive, and highly poisonous weed that is sometimes mistaken for one of its crop relatives. It is also commonly mistaken for Queen Anne's Lace (Daucus carota).
Updated: November 1, 2024
Can Flame Weeding be used for Early-Season Weed Control in Soybean?
Starting clean or weed-free is the key to a good weed control program, especially when noxious weeds, such as Palmer amaranth are present. While conventional growers can use soil-active herbicides to manage these weeds, control is more complicated in organic systems. Flame weeding is a non-chemical tactic that has been shown to control several grass and broadleaf weed species.
Updated: November 1, 2024
Garlic Mustard Identification and Management in the Landscape
Garlic Mustard Identification and Management in the Landscape
Updated: November 1, 2024
Understanding Preemergence Herbicides for Common Weeds in Vegetables
Understanding Preemergence Herbicides for Common Weeds in Vegetables
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