Term
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
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Term
Factors Affecting Weed/Crop Interference |
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Definition
1. Time of weed/crop emergence
2. Growth Form
3. Weed density
4. Physiological Basis of Competition - above ground
5. Physiological Basis of Competition - below ground |
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Term
Factors Affecting Weed/Crop Interference
1. Time of weed/crop emergence
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Definition
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Term
Factors Affecting Weed/Crop Interference
2. Growth Form |
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Definition
a)root form - tap vs fibrous, bunch vs spreading
b) height - prostrate vs direct growing
c) leaf area
d) free branching vs single stalk
-Distinct advantage of rapid growth with a tall dense canopy
-Lower advantage of slow growth rate with a thin canopy
-Highly dependent on crop |
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Term
Factors Affecting Weed/Crop Interference
3. Weed Density |
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Definition
-As weed density increases, severity of crop damage increases
-SEE GRAPHS |
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Term
Factors Affecting Weed/Crop Interference
4. Physiological Basis of Competition - above ground |
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Definition
a) light - often most cirtical
-leaf angle
-rapid expansion of a tall canopy
-large leaves
-light compensation point
-climbing height
-high allocation of dry matter to stem
b) C4 photosynthesis - under conditions of limiting CO2 |
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Term
Factors Affecting Weed/Crop Interference
5. Physiological Basis of Competition - below ground |
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Definition
a) Root Morphology
-early are rapid root penetration
-hight root density
-distribution - fibrous roots spread over wide area, thus more effective
b)nutrients - weeds are better at obtaining nutrients
-nitrogen - main
-phosphorous and potassium - more a factor in perennial
-nutrient management - low in legumes, P promotes poa annua in bent
c)water
-more of an issue under irrigated conditions
-becomes more of a limited factor during fruit/seed development |
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Term
Methods for manipulating the crop to gain competitiveness |
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Definition
1) row spacing - narrow spacing allos for quicker canopy coverage
2) fertilizer placement - in the row near the crop
3) drip irragation - in the row near the crop
4) breeding - some varieties are better adapted to weedier conditions |
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Term
Mechanisms of Interference |
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Definition
1) crop quality - hard to measure quantitatively, critical in vegetables
2) harvest losses - hard to seperate from direct competition
3) interference with other pest contiol methods
4) hand harvesting - fireweed in vegetables
5) staining of cotton |
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Term
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Definition
One plant chemically interfering with the growth of another plant
Koch postulates |
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Term
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Definition
One plant physically interferes with the growth and development of another plant
recieve partial or all growth requirement form the host plant
fully phothsynthetic (mistletoe) or non-photosynthetic
attaches by means of specilized structures |
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Term
Special adaptations of parasitic plants |
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Definition
- sticky seeds (mistletoe)
-exploding seed pods (dwarf mistletoe)
-host-excreted stimulant |
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Term
5 methods of weed management |
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Definition
1. preventitive
2. cultural
3. mechanical
4. biological
5.chemical |
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Term
7 steps to effective weed management |
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Definition
1. monitor seed and vegetative populations
2. identify problem weed speices
3. predict weed population shifts
4. decide weather control is needed
5. chose control technology
6. consider grower resources ($$$)
7. evaluate long-term impacts and options |
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Term
Definition of Weed management |
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Definition
system by which all available toos are used to reduce seed seedbank, prevent weed emergence with other plants, and minimized competition
or
the use of all methods in an intraged apporach to effectively manage weeds in a short and long term approach |
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Term
Definition of preventitve weed management |
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Definition
Measures taken to prevent the introduction, establishment and/or spread of specified wees in non-infested areas |
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Term
Federal noxious weed act of 1974 |
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Definition
-prevented entry of weeds of forgien origin
-established and enforced quarentines
-controlled and eradicated weeds with potential for great loss |
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Term
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Definition
Established Seed Labels
-% of pure seed
-% of other crop seeds
-% of weed seeds
-list of noxious weed seeds and their rate |
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Term
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Definition
used to isolate and prevent spread of noxious weed species such as witchweed, tropical soda apples |
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Term
6 Steps in weed prevention |
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Definition
1. do not let weeds reproduce (kill prior to seed set)
2. do not buy weed seeds in uninfested areas
3. do not plant infected crops of transplants
4. do not feed weed screenings to livestock
5. clean machinery when moved from one site to another
6. kill weeds in surrounding areas |
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Term
Cultural Weed Management
Crop Rotation |
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Definition
-prevents severe infestations of one or a few weeds DUE TO:
-differing planting and harvesting dates
-different competitve ability
-differing fertility, water, etc
-monocultures have typically greater weed infestations |
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Term
Cultural Weed Management
Planting Date |
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Definition
-rapid and even emergence of the crop is critical to crop vigor and competitive ability
-planting a crop to early will often result in poor germinations and low plant population, low soil temperature |
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Term
Cultural Weed Management
Spatial Arrangement |
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Definition
-reduced row spacing favors crop competitiveness
-limitation in row crops is equipment for plating, cultivation and harvest
-home gardens, plant as close together as possible, however tight spacing will increase disease and incest population |
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Term
Cultural Weed Management
Seeding Rate |
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Definition
- increase crop population will often improve the competitive ability of the crop - keep an eye on competition between the crops themselves |
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Term
Cultural Weed Management
Cultivar differences |
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Definition
-some cultivars do better than others
a) corn - late maturing less competitive than early maturing
b) wheat - normal height more competitive that semi-dwarf, however dwarfs yield more, so chemical control is used
c) peanut - Dixie-Runner has spreading growth habit and a better yield when grown with weeds than newer varieties like Florunner |
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Term
Cultural Weed Management
Soil Fertility |
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Definition
-species able to utilize soil nutrients will have competitive advantage
a) wild oat can take advantage of nitrogen earlier than wheat
b) N and P amendments can increase grassy weed infestations
-low N in turf, increase in black medic and legumes
-high N in turn, increase of poa and chickweed
c) fertilizer placement - decrease weed competition by banding fertilizer in the row |
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Term
Cultural Weed Management
Soil pH |
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Definition
-adjusted to meet the needs of the crop
-6-6.5 is best for uptake of nutrients |
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Term
Weeds As indicators of:
a) Low pH
b) compaction
c) poor drainage
d) low nitrogen
e) high pH |
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Definition
a) red sorrel (sourweed)
b) groosegrass and plantains
c) sedges and pennywort
d) legumes
e) plantains |
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Term
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Definition
-an open area that invites weeds (turf and ornamential)
-can be an issue with perennial forages and natural areas
-can also be considered an issue with not achieving proper stand in an agronomic or horticultural crop |
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Term
Natural Reasons for Voids |
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Definition
-Environmental Stress - flooding, hail, drought, lightning, hurricanes
-animals - wild hogs
-Disease, insects, nematodes |
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Term
6 Management reasons for voids |
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Definition
1) improper mowing
2) improper fertility
3) improper irrigation
4) lack of core cultivation
5) lack of thatch managment
6) lack of traffic control |
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Term
Cultural Weed Management Strategies
Summer annuals |
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Definition
-avoid establishment at time of grass germination
-avoid verticutting or core cultivation at the time of germination
-lower mowing height and bucket during seed setting
-relieve compation for goosegrass
-pre-emerge before germination temperatures are reached |
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Term
Cultural weed management strategies
winter annual grasses |
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Definition
-most competitive at close mowing, high water, high nitrogen
-correct drainage, raise mowing height
-avoid cultivation at germination temps
-collect clippings at time of high seed production |
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Term
Cultural weed management strategies
Perennial weeds in turf |
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Definition
-maintain dense turf through proper fertility, mowing, insect, disease control
-spot treat or remove isolated patches
-post-emerge in fall |
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Term
Biolgical Control
Definition |
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Definition
this type of control tries to introduce mortality factors into the population to establish a new equilibrium |
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Term
Biological Control
Objective |
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Definition
a fromally abundant organism (weed) has been reduced to a rare speices which is attacked by rare enemies |
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Term
Ecological Biological Control |
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Definition
action of parsites, predators, or pathogens that maintain another organism's population desity at a stable (acceptable) level. Introduce the species and they maintain their population which reducing and maintaining the weed |
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Term
Applied Biological Control |
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Definition
continued introduction of parasites, predators, or pathogens to supress weed population |
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Term
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Definition
a species which lives in or on a larger host, feeding upon it and frequently destroying it |
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Term
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Definition
an insect which is only parasitic in its immature stages and will destroy the host in the process of development |
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Term
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Definition
an animal which feeds upon other organisms |
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Term
5 Characteristics of a good biological system |
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Definition
1) host specific or other non important host species that will support it
2) effective in control, reduced to non-harmful levels
3) faborable host-plant synchroniztion with the natural enemies life cycle
4)be prolific and thrive in widespread areas
5) good colonizers |
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Term
5 Places Biological Control Fits |
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Definition
1) Perennial crops, low input cropping systems
2) rapid control not necessary
3) complete control not needed
4) monoculture of one target weed
5) natural ecosystems are ideal situations |
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Term
Where do biocontrols not fit? |
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Definition
-most row crops and turf - damage before effective control, many different weeds
-biocontrol requires leaving some of the weed, not ok in turf settings
-biocontrol needs to feed off weed, therefore damage is already done to cropping systems before the biocontrol system can work |
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Term
7 Methods of Mechanical Weed Control |
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Definition
1) weeding by hand
2) Tillage
3) mowing
4) large equipment
5) mulches
6) flooding
7) fire |
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Term
Mechanical Weed Management
Weeding by hand |
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Definition
- hand pulling
-hoeing
-garden tools
-primary method in under-developed areas
-expensive
-highly selective and often only method (vegetable operatons, $500-$900/acre) |
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Term
Mechanical Weed Management
Tilliage
reasons for using tillage (advantages) |
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Definition
-breaks weeds apart
-causes dessication
-exausts feed reserves
-reduces seed and/or vegetative propagule bank |
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Term
Mechanical Weed Management
Tillage
Disadvantages |
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Definition
-exposes soil to wind and water erosion
-burries weed seed, ensures survival through dormancy
-deep tillage can bring weed seeds to surface
-damage crop roots
-causes soil compaction
-several tillage operations must be done to be effectvie - $$$
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Term
Mechanical Weed Management
Tillage
Typical tillage scenario
conventional planting |
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Definition
-break ground with moldboard plow
-break clods with disk harrow
-spring tooth harrow 2x to smooth
-Plant
-cultivation - 2-4 times, depending on crop |
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Term
Mechanical Weed Management
Tillage
typical tillage scenario
concervation planting |
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Definition
-plant directly into previous crop residue
or
-deep chisel plow follwed by direct planting
or
-tillage in small strip, then plant directly into strip |
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Term
Mechanical Weed Management
Tillage
Cultivation |
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Definition
-In-row tillage
-plant crops in parallel rows and use tillage to keep middles clean |
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