Harvest is just around the corner for many Iowa farmers, and now is a good time to consider options to reduce movement of weed seed between fields with harvest equipment. Combines are extremely effective at transporting seed from field to field. A few precautions leading up to harvest and during harvest can help manage any escaped problem weeds.
Prior to harvest, scout fields for escaped weeds since weeds are easier to see after crops have matured. This is important to identify problem fields or areas for next year. Your notes about weed problems are critical to choosing effective management tactics for next year, so make this a priority before harvest.
In some situations, scattered weeds could be removed from the fields prior to harvest. It is much easier to manage weeds before they drop mature seed or before that mature seed goes through a combine.
Prevent spread of resistant weeds
Waterhemp is an example of a potentially herbicide-resistant species that may need to be contained, especially when it is out of control in only a few fields on the farm. Palmer amaranth and bur cucumber are examples of two species that may be either new or in few enough fields that it is valuable to prevent them from spreading further. These species are especially difficult to manage, and preplanning harvest can help reduce problems in future years.
If weeds can’t be rogued before harvest, decide whether a planned harvest order of fields needs to change to avoid spreading certain species to uninfested fields. Another precaution when harvesting fields, especially given all the drowned-out spots from this spring’s rains, would be to harvest around those areas in the field, rather than harvesting through them.
These steps are especially important if fields are suspected to have herbicide-resistant weeds that are not present elsewhere on the farm — or the fields have a new or unusual species that should be kept from spreading to other fields.
Clean out combine between fields
Finally, take steps to minimize movement of weed seed between fields on harvest equipment. In the future, new technology like the Harrington Seed Destructor will make weed management at harvest simpler, but until then, relying on good cleanout practices is necessary in some situations.
WEED SEED SPREADER: Harvesting equipment can carry a significant amount of material, including weed seed, between fields.
A combine can retain more than 150 pounds of biomaterial, including crop seed, plant material and weed seed after the machine has been run empty. A few short steps to perform a self-cleaning of the combine and about 20 to 30 minutes of time before moving to another field can further reduce movement of new weed problems to another field. Read more about the steps in the document Harvest Helpline: Combine Cleanout.
Anderson is an Iowa State University Extension field agronomist covering central Iowa.
Credit: www.wallacesfarmer.com