4.1 Article

Seed destruction of weeds in southern US crops using heat and narrow-windrow burning

Journal

WEED TECHNOLOGY
Volume 34, Issue 4, Pages 589-596

Publisher

CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1017/wet.2020.36

Keywords

Barnyardgrass; Echinochloa crus-galli(L; ) P; Beauv; Italian ryegrass; Lolium perenneL; ssp; multiflorum(Lam; ) Husnot; hemp sesbania; Sesbania herbacea(Mill; ) McVaugh; johnsongrass; Sorghum halepense(L; ) Pers; Palmer amaranth; Amaranthus palmeri(S; ) Watson; pitted morningglory; Ipomoea lacunosaL; prickly sida; Sida spinosaL; sicklepod; Senna obtusifolia(L; ) Irwin & Barneby; velvetleaf; Abutilon theophrastiMedik; soybean; Glycine max(L; ) Merr; Harvest weed seed control; kiln; weed seed viability; cultural practices

Funding

  1. Arkansas Soybean Promotion Board

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Narrow-windrow burning has been a successful form of harvest weed seed control in Australian cropping systems, but little is known about the efficacy of narrow-windrow burning on weed seeds infesting U.S. cropping systems. An experiment was conducted using a high-fire kiln that exposed various grass and broadleaf weed seeds to temperatures of 200, 300, 400, 500, and 600 C for 20, 40, 60, and 80 s to determine the temperature and time needed to kill weed seeds. Weeds evaluated included Italian ryegrass, barnyardgrass, johnsongrass, sicklepod, Palmer amaranth, prickly sida, velvetleaf, pitted morningglory, and hemp sesbania. Two field experiments were also conducted over consecutive growing seasons, with the first experiment aimed at determining the amount of heat produced during burning of narrow windrows of soybean harvest residues (chaff and straw) and the effect of this heat on weed seed mortality. The second field experiment aimed to determine the effect of wind speed on the duration and intensity of burning narrow windrows of soybean harvest residues. Following exposure to the highest temperature and longest duration in the kiln, only sicklepod showed any survival (<1% average); however, in most cases, the seeds were completely destroyed (ash). A heat index of only 22,600 was needed to kill all seeds of Palmer amaranth, barnyardgrass, and Italian ryegrass. In the field, all seeds of the evaluated weed species were completely destroyed by narrow-windrow burning of 1.08 to 1.95 kg m(-2)of soybean residues. The burn duration of the soybean harvest residues declined as wind speed increased. Findings from the kiln and field experiments show that complete kill is likely for weed seeds concentrated into narrow windrows of burned soybean residues. Given the low cost of implementation of narrow-windrow burning and the seed kill efficacy on various weed species, this strategy may be an attractive option for destroying weed seed.

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