1 / 136

WEED IDENTIFICATION

WEED IDENTIFICATION. TRI-CO. YOUNG FARMERS MARCH 7, 2002. Original Power Point Created by Joey Wells. Modified by Georgia Agricultural Education Curriculum Office June 2002. WHAT IS A WEED?. A weed is a plant out of place. WHAT EFFECTS DO WEEDS HAVE ON US TODAY?.

Download Presentation

WEED IDENTIFICATION

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. WEED IDENTIFICATION TRI-CO. YOUNG FARMERS MARCH 7, 2002 Original Power Point Created by Joey Wells Modified by Georgia Agricultural Education Curriculum Office June 2002

  2. WHAT IS A WEED? A weed is a plant out of place.

  3. WHAT EFFECTS DO WEEDS HAVE ON US TODAY?

  4. WEEDS LOWER THE YIELD OF CROPS - • COMPETE FOR WATER, NUTRIENTS, LIGHT, AND SPACE. • ONE WILD MUSTARD PLANT USES AS MUCH N & P AS TWO OAT PLANTS • ONE PIGWEED PLANT MAY USE AS MUCH WATER AS A CORN PLANT

  5. WEEDS LOWER THE QUALITY OF CROPS - • WEEDS AFFECT THE QUALITY OF HAY AND GRAIN USED FOR LIVESTOCK • MILK WILL TASTE LIKE WILD GARLIC OR BITTER SNEEZEWEED IF EATEN • WEEDS CAN STAIN THE LINT OF COTTON

  6. WEEDS INTERFERE WITH CROP HARVEST - • CAUSES DELAYS AND GREATER HARVEST LOSS. • GRAIN MAY NEED DRYING IF HEAVILY INFESTED BY WEEDS

  7. THE LIFE CYCLE OF WEEDS

  8. THERE ARE FOUR TYPES OF WEEDS BASED ON THEIR LIFE CYCLE • SUMMER ANNUALS • WINTER ANNUALS • BIENNIALS • PERENNIALS

  9. SUMMER ANNUALS • GERMINATE IN THE SPRING AND DIE IN THE FALL AFTER THE FIRST FROST • SEEDS MATURE AND SCATTER • MOST LIE DORMANT UNTIL SPRING • EXAMPLES – MORNING GLORY, PIGWEED, COCKLEBUR, AND CRABGRASS

  10. WINTER ANNUALS • GERMINATE IN THE FALL OR WINTER • PRODUCE SEED IN THE EARLY SUMMER AND THEN DIE • SEEDS LIE DORMANT DURING THE SUMMER MONTHS • EXAMPLES – WILD MUSTARD, CHICKWEED, AND HENBIT

  11. BIENNIALS • PRODUCE VEGETATIVELY FROM SEED THE FIRST SEASON • BECOME DORMANT OVER THE WINTER • PRODUCE FLOWERS AND SEED THE SECOND SEASON • EXAMPLES – MUSK THISTLE, WILD CARROT, AND COMMON MULLEIN

  12. PERENNIALS • LIVE FOR THREE OR MORE YEARS • MOST PRODUCE SEED EACH YEAR AFTER ESTABLISHMENT • DIVIDED INTO THREE CLASSES ON THE BASIS OF REPRODUCTION • SIMPLE PERENNIAL • BULBOUS PERENNIAL • CREEPING PERENNIAL

  13. SIMPLE PERENNIAL • REPRODUCE PRIMARILY BY SEED • EXAMPLE - DANDELION

  14. BULBOUS PERENNIAL • PROPAGATE BY BULBS OR BULBLETS AS WELL AS BY SEED • EXAMPLES – WILD ONION AND WILD GARLIC

  15. CREEPING PERENNIAL • PROPAGATE BY MEANS OF RHIZOMES (UNDERGROUND STEMS), STOLONS (ABOVE GROUND STEMS), OR SPREADING ROOTS OR TUBERS, AS WELL AS BY SEED. • EXAMPLES – JOHNSONGRASS > RHIZOMES AND SEED; BERMUDA GRASS > RHIZOMES, STOLONS, SEED

  16. CARPETWEED

  17. REDROOT PIGWEED

  18. SPINY AMARANTH

  19. POISON IVY

  20. HONEYVINE MILKWEED

  21. BUTTERFLY MILKWEED

  22. TRUMPETCREEPER

  23. JAPANESE HONEYSUCKLE

  24. CORN COCKLE

  25. HEARTLEAF DRYMARY

  26. MOUSEEAR CHICKWEED

  27. COMMON CHICKWEED

  28. COMMON LAMBSQUARTERS

  29. ASIATIC DAYFLOWER

  30. HEMP DOGBANE

  31. BRISTLY STARBUR

  32. COMMON YARROW

  33. COMMON RAGWEED

  34. GIANT RAGWEED

  35. MAYWEED CHAMOMILE

  36. WHITE HEATH ASTER

  37. SPANISHNEEDLES

  38. CORNFLOWER

  39. BLESSED THISTLE

  40. ECLIPTA

  41. ANNUAL FLEABANE

  42. HORSEWEED

  43. DOGFENNEL

  44. HAIRY GALINSOGA

  45. CUDWEED

  46. BITTER SNEEZEWEED

  47. CAMPHORWEED

  48. PRICKLY LETTUCE

  49. CAROLINA FALSE DANDELION

More Related