Publication | Closed Access
Effects of herbicides or mowing on musk thistle seed production*
26
Citations
5
References
1975
Year
EngineeringBotanyAgricultural EconomicsWeed ControlBiosynthesisSustainable AgriculturePlant PopulationTerminal HeadsToxicologyPublic HealthCrop-weed InteractionWeed ScienceEffective Herbicide TreatmentsPest ManagementIntegrated Plant ProtectionPharmacologyBiologyCrop ProtectionSeed Processing
Summary Mowing musk thistle (Carduus nutans L.) within 2 days of the first terminal heads in a plant population showing anthesis eliminated the production of germinable seed from all mowed stalks. Mowing later than 4 days after anthesis led to significant amounts of germinable seed being produced. Regrowth, which produced viable seed, usually occurred from plants mowed before first terminal heads began anthesis. A single mowing usually did not give satisfactory control due to wide differences in the maturity of plants in a natural population. When the terminal heads had reached late bud or more mature stages, 2,4‐D ester [isoocyt] ester of (2,4‐dichlorophenoxy) acetic acid] at M kg/ha or 2–2 kg/ha did not provide satisfactory control. In general, the most effective herbicide treatments tested at all three stages of maturity were dicamba (3,6‐dichloro‐o‐anisic acid) at 056 kg/ha plus 2,4‐D amine (dimethyl amine salt) at M kg/ha, 2,4‐D ester at 4–4 kg/ha, or dicamba at 0–56 kg/ha. Inconsistent control of musk thistle results from variability within naturally occurring populations. Uneven development of stands as well as variation among plants are suggested as possible causes.
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