Thermal, mechanical and chemical control of ragweed (Ambrosia artemisiifolia) in different habitats

A small plot field experiment with transplanted ragweed (Ambrosia artemisiifolia) into gravel and grassland and a large scale field experiment on a roadside banquette in Brandenburg with a natural ragweed infestation were carried out. Thermal control treatments were hot air (gravel and grassland) an...

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Main Authors: Sölter, Ulrike, Verschwele, Arnd
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: Julius Kühn-Institut 2014-02-01
Series:Julius-Kühn-Archiv
Subjects:
IPM
Online Access:http://pub.jki.bund.de/index.php/JKA/article/view/2909/3109
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spelling doaj-a101e511451048d8b8a5360c94ec278d2020-11-24T20:46:43ZdeuJulius Kühn-InstitutJulius-Kühn-Archiv1868-98921868-98922014-02-0144350751010.5073/jka.2014.443.064Thermal, mechanical and chemical control of ragweed (Ambrosia artemisiifolia) in different habitatsSölter, UlrikeVerschwele, ArndA small plot field experiment with transplanted ragweed (Ambrosia artemisiifolia) into gravel and grassland and a large scale field experiment on a roadside banquette in Brandenburg with a natural ragweed infestation were carried out. Thermal control treatments were hot air (gravel and grassland) and hot water (roadside) and flaming, the mechanical treatment was mowing and the chemical treatment was the application of the herbicide combination MCPA and Dicamba. The gravel and grassland experiment was conducted at two growth stages of ragweed (BBCH 16-18 and 22-29), at the roadside ragweed was at BBCH 50-65. Dry matter yield of ragweed was assessed 9 weeks after the treatments were conducted in gravel and grassland and 4 weeks after the treatment at the roadside. In gravel and grassland the best eradication at both growth stages by thermal control was achieved by hot air in comparison to the untreated plots (significant at P <0.05). And at the roadside significant lower dry matter was determined by hot water and flaming in comparison to the untreated plots (significant at P <0.05). The results of these experiments demonstrated the efficiency of thermal control methods based on hot air and hot water as an alternative to herbicide control and mowing in habitats where herbicide application is not allowed or mowing gives no sufficient eradication results, like on roadside banquettes.http://pub.jki.bund.de/index.php/JKA/article/view/2909/3109banquettegrasslandgravelIPMnon-cropping area
collection DOAJ
language deu
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sölter, Ulrike
Verschwele, Arnd
spellingShingle Sölter, Ulrike
Verschwele, Arnd
Thermal, mechanical and chemical control of ragweed (Ambrosia artemisiifolia) in different habitats
Julius-Kühn-Archiv
banquette
grassland
gravel
IPM
non-cropping area
author_facet Sölter, Ulrike
Verschwele, Arnd
author_sort Sölter, Ulrike
title Thermal, mechanical and chemical control of ragweed (Ambrosia artemisiifolia) in different habitats
title_short Thermal, mechanical and chemical control of ragweed (Ambrosia artemisiifolia) in different habitats
title_full Thermal, mechanical and chemical control of ragweed (Ambrosia artemisiifolia) in different habitats
title_fullStr Thermal, mechanical and chemical control of ragweed (Ambrosia artemisiifolia) in different habitats
title_full_unstemmed Thermal, mechanical and chemical control of ragweed (Ambrosia artemisiifolia) in different habitats
title_sort thermal, mechanical and chemical control of ragweed (ambrosia artemisiifolia) in different habitats
publisher Julius Kühn-Institut
series Julius-Kühn-Archiv
issn 1868-9892
1868-9892
publishDate 2014-02-01
description A small plot field experiment with transplanted ragweed (Ambrosia artemisiifolia) into gravel and grassland and a large scale field experiment on a roadside banquette in Brandenburg with a natural ragweed infestation were carried out. Thermal control treatments were hot air (gravel and grassland) and hot water (roadside) and flaming, the mechanical treatment was mowing and the chemical treatment was the application of the herbicide combination MCPA and Dicamba. The gravel and grassland experiment was conducted at two growth stages of ragweed (BBCH 16-18 and 22-29), at the roadside ragweed was at BBCH 50-65. Dry matter yield of ragweed was assessed 9 weeks after the treatments were conducted in gravel and grassland and 4 weeks after the treatment at the roadside. In gravel and grassland the best eradication at both growth stages by thermal control was achieved by hot air in comparison to the untreated plots (significant at P <0.05). And at the roadside significant lower dry matter was determined by hot water and flaming in comparison to the untreated plots (significant at P <0.05). The results of these experiments demonstrated the efficiency of thermal control methods based on hot air and hot water as an alternative to herbicide control and mowing in habitats where herbicide application is not allowed or mowing gives no sufficient eradication results, like on roadside banquettes.
topic banquette
grassland
gravel
IPM
non-cropping area
url http://pub.jki.bund.de/index.php/JKA/article/view/2909/3109
work_keys_str_mv AT solterulrike thermalmechanicalandchemicalcontrolofragweedambrosiaartemisiifoliaindifferenthabitats
AT verschwelearnd thermalmechanicalandchemicalcontrolofragweedambrosiaartemisiifoliaindifferenthabitats
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