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Posted 29 January 2004. Crop Management.


Organic Weed Control

 

Scientists Recommend Using a Companion Crop to Control Weeds Organically Since Traditional Cultivation Methods Can Erode Soil


American Society of Agronomy. www.agronomy.org.


Madison, WI (January 28, 2004) - Organic soybean producers may be able to use winter cereal rye as an inter-seeded companion crop to control weeds, according to research led by a Michigan Agricultural Experiment Station (MAES) crop and soil scientist.

Traditionally, organic growers have used only mechanical cultivation to control weeds, but this method has been shown to cause soil erosion and lead to poor soil structure. Conventional soybean growers have used cover crops successfully in conjunction with herbicides to reduce cultivation and control weeds. The scientists hypothesized that an adaptation of this technique could also be useful for organic growers.

“Organic growers needed new techniques that meshed with organic systems and had a more positive effect on soil quality, particularly soil structure,” said Kurt Thelen, MAES crop and soil sciences researcher at Michigan State University. “Our research looked at two types of planting systems for organic soybeans to determine if interseeding winter cereal rye in the soybeans could help control weeds.”

Thelen worked on the research with MSU Extension district field crops agent Dale Mutch, and Research Assistant Todd Martin. They found that inter-seeded winter cereal rye decreases the amount of weeds in the soybeans and increases soybean yield, in years where soil moisture was not a yield-limiting factor. Two years of the three-year project were drier than the 30-year average, which resulted in decreased soybean yields.

“Our results suggest that some means of terminating the inter-seeded rye is necessary for effective management across a range of precipitation levels,” Thelen said. “In 76-cm row organic soybean production systems, mechanical cultivation would be an approved practice for terminating rye growth. However, in 19-cm drill-planted systems, new technology that meets the regulatory criteria for organic production is needed to effectively terminate the inter-seeded rye and alleviate moisture-stress related concerns.”

The study is published in the January/February 2004 issue of the Agronomy Journal.
 

Contact:

Sara Uttech

American Society of Agronomy

608/273-8090, ext. 323,

suttech@agronomy.org
 

Kurt Thelen

Michigan State University

517/355-0271, ext. 232

thelenk3@msu.edu