
Herbicidal Effects of Vinegar and a Clove Oil Product on Redroot
Pigweed (Amaranthus retroflexus) and Velvetleaf (Abutilon
theophrasti)
G. J. Evans1, R. R. Bellinder1 and M. C. Goffinet2
Abstract
Weed management can be difficult and expensive in organic agricultural
systems. Because of the potentially high cost of the natural product
herbicides vinegar and clove oil, their efficacy with regard to weed
species growth stages needs to be determined. A further objective
was to identify anatomical and morphological features of redroot
pigweed and velvetleaf that influence the effectiveness of vinegar
and clove oil.
Research was conducted on greenhouse-grown cotyledon,
two-leaf, and four-leaf redroot pigweed and velvetleaf. Dose–response
treatments for vinegar included 150-, 200-, 250-, and 300-grain vinegar
at 318 L/ha and at 636 L/ha. Clove oil treatments included 1.7, 3.4,
5.1, and 6.8% (v/v) dilutions of a clove oil product in water (318
L/ha), and a 1.7% (v/v) dilution in 200-grain vinegar (318 L/ha).
An untreated control was included. Separate plantings of velvetleaf
and pigweed were treated with vinegar or clove oil and were used
to study anatomical and morphological differences between the two
species.
Redroot pigweed was easier to control with both products
than velvetleaf. Whereas 200-grain vinegar applied at 636 L/ha
provided 100% control (6 d after treatment [DAT]) and mortality (9
DAT) of
two-leaf redroot pigweed, this same treatment on two-leaf velvetleaf
provided only 73% control and 18% mortality. The obtuse leaf blade
angle in velvetleaf moved product away from the shoot tip, whereas
in pigweed, the acute leaf blade angle, deep central leaf vein,
and groove on the upper side of the leaf petiole facilitated product
movement toward the stem axis and shoot tip.
For both species,
and
at all application timings, 150-grain vinegar at 636 L/ha provided
control equal to that of 300-grain vinegar at 318 L/ha. As
growth stage advanced, control and biomass reduction decreased and
survival
increased. Application timing will be critical to maximizing
weed control with vinegar and clove oil.
Source
Weed Technology (2009) 23: 292-299
Author Locations and Affiliations
(1) Department
of Horticulture, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY 14853
(2) Department of
Horticultural Sciences, New York State Agricultural Experiment Station,
Geneva, NY 14456.
Posted January 2010