| Busey, P. and B. L. Johnston.
2006. Impact of cultural factors on weed populations in St.
Augustinegrass turf. Weed Sci. 54:961-967.
Abstract
Managing weeds in lawns using cultural practices such as
mowing, irrigation, and fertilization may be important in
integrated management. A field experiment evaluated the impact
of cultural factors on weed populations in St. Augustinegrass
turf. Irrigation treatments were daily to replace evapotranspiration
("Daily"), weekly to saturate the root zone only
when wilted ("Conditional Weekly"), and as needed
to saturate the root zone after severe wilt ("Severely
Wilted"). Averaged over 3 yr, the Daily, Conditional
Weekly, and Severely Wilted irrigation treatments resulted
in 30, 6, and 2% dollarweed cover, respectively. Except for
dollarweed and mat lippia, the largest cover of other weeds
was under Severely Wilted irrigation. Fertilization rates
were 0, 14, or 28 g N m-2 yr-1; in 2002,
the highest fertilization rate had the smallest cover of weeds
other than dollarweed. Mowing heights were 64, 89, or 114
mm; in 2003, the shortest mowing height had the smallest cover
and dry weight of weeds other than dollarweed. After 3 yr
of cultural management, most plots were excessively weedy,
and turfgrass quality for all cultural management-treatment
combinations, in the absence of herbicides, was unacceptable.
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