4.1 Article

Evaluation of panicle removal methods and crop topping applications as supplemental tools for wild oat (Avena fatua) management

Journal

WEED TECHNOLOGY
Volume 35, Issue 6, Pages 932-944

Publisher

CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1017/wet.2021.54

Keywords

dormancy; rotational studies; integrated weed management

Funding

  1. Alberta Crop Industry Development Fund [2015C005R]
  2. Patty Reid in Lacombe

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The study aimed to manage wild oat by exploiting the height differential between wild oat and crops at different growth stages. The early application of herbicide showed the most effective control over wild oat populations.
Y Increased frequency and occurrence of herbicide-resistant biotypes heightens the need for alternative wild oat management strategies. This study aimed to exploit the height differential between wild oat and crops by targeting wild oat between panicle emergence and seed shed timing. Two field studies were conducted either in Lacombe, AB, or Lacombe, AB and Saskatoon, SK, from 2015 to 2017. In the first study, we compared panicle removal methods: hand clipping, use of a hedge trimmer, and a selective herbicide crop topping application to a weedy check and an industry standard in-crop herbicide application in wheat. These treatments were tested early (at panicle emergence), late (at initiation of seed shed), or in combination at one location over 3 yr. In the second study, we investigated optimal timing of panicle removal via a hedge trimmer with weekly removals in comparison to a weedy check in wheat and lentil. This study was conducted at two locations, Lacombe, AB, and Saskatoon, SK, over 3 yr. Among all the tested methods, the early crop topping treatment consistently had the largest impact on wild oat density, dockage, seedbank, and subsequent year crop yield. The early (at panicle emergence) or combination of early and late (at initiation of seed shed) treatments tended to reduce wild oat populations the following season the most compared to the late treatments. Subsequent wild oat populations were not influenced by panicle removal timing, but only by crop and location interactions. Panicle removal timing did significantly affect wild oat dockage in the year of treatment, but no consistent optimal timing could be identified. However, the two studies together highlight additional questions to be investigated, as well as the opportunity to manage wild oat seedbank inputs at the panicle emergence stage of the wild oat lifecycle.

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