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Turf Weed Management Strategies

Turf Weed Management Strategies. Identify Weed Species and Determine Life Cycles Don’t assume you have the same weed or weeds as your neighbor. You may not even have the same turfgrass. Turf Weed Management Strategies. Weed Identification Risky method – but quick

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Turf Weed Management Strategies

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  1. Turf Weed Management Strategies Identify Weed Species and Determine Life Cycles Don’t assume you have the same weed or weeds as your neighbor. You may not even have the same turfgrass.

  2. Turf Weed Management Strategies Weed Identification Risky method – but quick Ask your neighbors or friends. (They sometimes are wrong, and you can end up wasting money on ineffective control measures.)

  3. Turf Weed Management Strategies Weed Identification Possible time consuming method – but reliable Dig up samples and take to your local county cooperative extension office for identification and a control recommendation. (If they can id at the office, this is not time consuming. If they can’t id, they will send your sample to the weed science department at NCSU. A reply could take days or weeks.)

  4. Turf Weed Management Strategies Weed Identification When sending samples, collect healthy, normal growing weeds if possible and include above ground as well as below ground vegetation. Wrap weeds in moist paper towels to keep as fresh as possible and put in a plastic bag. Describe the area where the weed problem exists.

  5. Turf Weed Management Strategies Weed Identification Quickest reliable method Learn to identify weeds by yourself. A diagnostic kit consisting of a magnifying lens and weed id guide or guides would be helpful. (The sooner you know the weed population, the sooner you can develop a weed management strategy.)

  6. Turf Weed Management Strategies Weed Identification Guides To identify mainly from pictures, there are several excellent weed id guides for settings such as turfgrasses, crops, ponds and forests. Many of these guides include control options as well.

  7. Turf Weed Management Strategies Weed Identification Guides Color Atlas of Turfgrass Weeds • Authors include, McCarty, Everest, Hall, Murphy and (Yelverton – NCSU) • Includes control options

  8. Turf Weed Management Strategies Weed Identification Guides Univ. of GA Cooperative Ext. Service Website • Identification and Control of Weeds in Southern Ponds • Poisonous Plants of the Southern United States • Weeds of Southern Turfgrasses • Weeds of Southern United States

  9. Turf Weed Management Strategies Weed Identification Guides The Southern Weed Science Society • Forest Plants of the Southeast and Their Wildlife Uses • Weed Identification Guide

  10. Turf Weed Management Strategies Weed Identification Guides Dr. Joe Neal Website - NCSU • Identifying Seedling and Mature Weeds • Weeds of Arkansas • Weeds of Southern Turfgrass • Weeds of the Northeast

  11. Turf Weed Management Strategies Weed Identification Guides To identify weeds (plants) using keys that give plant descriptions that notice its essential characters, synonyms and place of growth, we at NCSU use books entitled… New Britton & Brown Illustrated Flora and also Turfgrass Pest Management Manual

  12. Turf Weed Management Strategies Weed Identification Guides Problems associated with turf managers using botanical identification books such as New Britton & Brown Illustrated Flora… Identification based on flower and reproductive structures (these are constantly being removed by mowing – so you hardly ever get to see these) Mowed grasses are sometimes impossible to correctly id.

  13. Turf Weed Management Strategies Weed Identification Guides Problems associated with turf managers using books such as New Britton & Brown Illustrated Flora… You would need to know scientific terminology of flower and reproductive structures, as well as other plant parts. (What are glumes, lemmas, stamens, pistils, etc…)

  14. Turf Weed Management Strategies Weed Identification Guides An advantage using books such as New Britton & Brown Illustrated Flora… Contains thousands of grass AND broadleaf plants (you probably won’t have a specimen that is not listed) – Your plant sample can most likely be identified if you are persistent.

  15. Turf Weed Management Strategies Weed Identification Guides Turfgrass Pest Management Manual • Keys out grasses only (weeds and turf) using vegetative instead of reproductive characteristics • Photos of grass and broadleaf weeds with general descriptions of growth characteristics • Consists of plants commonly grown in NC

  16. Weed Biology Ten Most Common Weeds in North Carolina Turf • Annual bluegrass • Crabgrass species (smooth, large) • Dallisgrass • Chickweed species (common, mouseear) • Goosegrass • Henbit • Clover species (white, hop) • Dandelion • Wild garlic • Kyllinga species (green, false-green) 2000 Proceedings - SWSS

  17. Weed Biology Ten Most Troublesome Weeds in North Carolina Turf • Annual bluegrass • Dallisgrass • Kyllinga species (green, false-green) • Crabgrass species (smooth, large) • Goosegrass • Virginia buttonweed • Purple nutsedge • Violet species • Yellow nutsedge • Wild garlic 2000 Proceedings - SWSS

  18. Grass Vegetative Key • Based primarily on… • 1. Leaf vernation • 2. Ligule • 3. Auricle • 4. Collar • Sheath • and also presence or absence of rhizomes or stolons

  19. Grass Vegetative Key Leaf vernation is the arrangement of the leaves of the budleaf (youngest leaf) and surrounding sheath. Leaf vernations are either rolled or folded (V-shaped) in the bud leaf.

  20. Grass Vegetative Key Grasses rolled in the budleaf include… Smooth crabgrass Bahiagrass Bentgrass Dallisgrass Tall fescue Foxtail species Annual ryegrass

  21. Grass Vegetative Key Grasses folded in the budleaf include… Bermudagrass Bluegrass species Carpetgrass Centipedegrass Goosegrass Perennial ryegrass St. Augustinegrass

  22. Grass Vegetative Key Ligule is a protruding structure from the upper leaf surface where the blade and sheath join. Ligules can be membranous (shiny), hairy, membranous with hairs or absent.

  23. Grass Vegetative Key Creeping bentgrass Bluegrass species Smooth crabgrass Dallisgrass Tall fescue Annual ryegrass Perennial ryegrass have membranous ligules

  24. Grass Vegetative Key Bermudagrass Carpetgrass Foxtail species St. Augustinegrass Zoysiagrass have hairy ligules

  25. Grass Vegetative Key Bahiagrass Centipedegrass Goosegrass have membranous ligules with hairs Barnyardgrass does not have a ligule.

  26. Grass Vegetative Key Auricle is a pair of appendages protruding from the sides of the grass leaf at the junction of the blade and sheath. Auricles can be rudimentary (short and blunt), large and claw-like or absent.

  27. Grass Vegetative Key Tall fescue has short or blunt auricles. Annual and perennial ryegrass have large or claw-like auricles. The remaining previously-mentioned grasses have no auricles.

  28. Grass Vegetative Key Collar is the region on the back side of a leaf where the leaf blade and sheath are joined. Collars can be divided by the leaf midrib or continuous, with shapes ranging from broad to narrow.

  29. Grass Vegetative Key Bluegrass species Smooth crabgrass Tall fescue Foxtail species Perennial ryegrass have collars divided by a midrib

  30. Grass Vegetative Key Bahiagrass, creeping bentgrass Bermudagrass, carpetgrass Centipedegrass, dallisgrass Goosegrass, annual ryegrass St. Augustinegrass, zoysiagrass have continuous collars

  31. Why Weeds are Present in Turfgrass Weeds are the result of improperly managed turf.

  32. What is Properly Managed Turfgrass? • The turf species must be adapted to its environment. • Should you choose cool or warm season turf? • Is it shade tolerant? • (St. Augustine, tall fescue, perennial bluegrass) • Does it require full sunlight? (Bermudagrass)

  33. What is Properly Managed Turfgrass? Turf must be mowed at proper height and frequency. 3 Inch Turf Mowing Height Tall fescue Tall fescue / fine fescue / per. bluegrass mixtures

  34. What is Properly Managed Turfgrass? 2.5 Inch Turf Mowing Height Perennial bluegrass / perennial ryegrass mixtures Bahiagrass St. Augustinegrass

  35. What is Properly Managed Turfgrass? 2 Inch Turf Mowing Height Perennial bluegrass Perennial bluegrass / fine fescue

  36. What is Properly Managed Turfgrass? 0.75 – 1 Inch Turf Mowing Height Bermudagrass Centipedegrass Zoysiagrass

  37. What is Properly Managed Turfgrass? The turf must be fertilized at the proper time with the proper rate and technique.

  38. What is Properly Managed Turfgrass? Cool Season Turf Nitrogen Timings and Amounts For all cool season turf, start applications in September – October and finish in February – March. Do not apply nitrogen in the spring or summer because of disease concerns. 3 lbs of N per 1000 sq ft per year is sufficient.

  39. What is Properly Managed Turfgrass? Warm Season Turf Nitrogen Timings and Amounts Timings and rates vary between species, but generally start in the spring and fertilize through summer. Do not apply nitrogen in the fall or winter. Total N rates range from 0.5 lb per 1000 sq ft per year for centipedegrass to 6 lbs for hybrid bermuda.

  40. What is Properly Managed Turfgrass? The turf site must be well drained, noncompacted and receive adequate rainfall or irrigation.

  41. Indicator Weeds Some weeds prefer conditions such as low / high pH, compaction, shade, dry / wet soils, or low / high nitrogen. Under these conditions, the turf may perform poorly, but these weeds will continually be a nuisance until the underlying problem is corrected regardless of the choice of herbicides.

  42. Indicator Weeds The presence of an indicator weed suggests a condition but is not proof of a condition. It is not always feasible or practical to fix the underlying problem because of money, time or human nature.

  43. Indicator Weeds Herbicides are short-term solutions and can’t compensate for poorly managed turf. Consider them as band-aids or duct tape (temporary fixes). Herbicides will not eliminate weeds permanently, but correcting the origin of turf stress may.

  44. Indicator Weed Examples Low soil pH Red sorrel High soil pH Broadleaf plantain Droughty soils Spotted spurge, black medic, knotweed, woodsorrel species, lespedeza, bracted plantain Wet soils Sedge and kyllinga species, annual bluegrass, goosegrass, moss, algae

  45. Indicator Weed Examples High nematodes Spotted spurge, prostrate knotweed, Florida pusley Low mowing height Annual bluegrass, chickweed species, algae Low soil nitrogen Legumes (clover, chickweed and speedwell species, black medic, chicory), broomsedge, bitter sneezeweed High soil nitrogen Annual bluegrass, ryegrass species, moss

  46. Indicator Weed Examples Poor (sandy) soil Sandspur, poorjoe, quackgrass Compacted soil Annual bluegrass, goosegrass, prostrate knotweed, spotted spurge Shade Ground ivy

  47. Weed Control Procedures A successful weed management strategy should integrate all of these procedures and not rely heavily on one. Preventative Mechanical Biological Cultural Chemical

  48. Weed Control Procedures • Preventative • Good sanitation • Clean mowers, tillage implements and other turf equipment before moving to new sites to remove weed seeds and vegetative material.

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