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May 31, 2023Weeds and Insect Management in Desert Produce (2023)
It’s never too early to start planning for next produce season. And this includes maintaining a clean culture with effective weed control. I think most PCAs and growers recognize that weed management is important in leafy vegetable and melon production for all the obvious reasons. However, weed management is also essential for another important, but often overlooked, reason. Weeds can serve as host plants for many important insect pests, and when not controlled in the field they can be an impediment to insect control. Weeds can serve a beneficial role by harboring insect natural enemies and pollinators, but the consequences resulting from weeds harboring insect pests often outweigh benefits they potentially provide. Although flowering weeds can provide a reservoir for natural enemies, and a source of nectar and pollen for a pollinators, these same weedy refuges can serve as host sources for many key insect pests that cause economic damage to vegetable crops. Weeds found on field margins and ditch banks can provide insect pests with suitable resources needed for rapid population growth which subsequently can lead to insect infestations occurring in adjacent vegetable crops. In addition, many weed species can provide insects with host plants that serve as a bridge between cropping seasons when vegetables crops are not in production (May-August). Volunteer melons and cotton are also considered weeds (“a plant out of place”). If not removed in a timely manner, these weedy volunteer plants can sustain large numbers of insect pests that can disperse onto newly planted fields. Weeds can also serve as alternate host plants for three important groups of viruses that affect vegetable and melons; tospoviruses, potyviruses and criniviruses. For example, one of the primary insect vectors of the tospovirus, Impatirens Necrotic Spot Virus (INSV), is the western flower thrips. Not surprising, common desert weed species such as lambsquarters, nettleleaf goosefoot, cheeseweed and purselane can all harbor large thrips densities and serve as reproductive hosts for thrips. More importantly, these weeds are known reservoirs of INSV, and weeds collected in Yuma over the past year have tested positive for INSV. Finally, weeds can serve as impediments to insecticide applications. Dense weed foliage in vegetable and melon fields can negatively influence foliar spray applications by intercepting spray droplets before reaching the target crop, which can result in less insecticide deposition and unacceptable crop damage. Soil applied insecticides (e.g., imidacloprid, Coragen, Verimark) can also be impacted by unmanaged weed growth. Weeds growing unchecked during stand establishment can compete with the seedling plants for water and fertilizer, but they can also compete with crop plants for soil insecticides. Excessive weed densities can significantly intercept insecticides in the soil profile and reduce the amount available for uptake by the target crop. For more information on this topic, please visit Weed Interference with Insect Management in Desert Crops.
Green peach aphid infesting cheeseweed leaf adjacent to lettuce fieldTo contact John Palumbo go to: jpalumbo@ag.Arizona.edu