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1 April 2016 Herbicide Control Strategies for Ventenata dubia in the Intermountain Pacific Northwest
John M. Wallace, Timothy S. Prather
Author Affiliations +
Abstract

Ventenata dubia is an exotic annual grass that has become increasingly invasive in various perennial grass systems throughout the Intermountain Pacific Northwest. Currently, little information is available to landowners about herbicide control options. In our first field study, we evaluated V. dubia control efficacy and perennial grass tolerance of herbicides applied pre-emergence (PRE) at two locations and as an early postemergence (EPOST) application at four different conservation reserve grasslands, with each grassland dominated by different perennial grass species. Treatments included flufenacet plus metribuzin (303 76 g ai ha−1 [0.27 0.07 lb ai ac−1]), propoxycarbazone-sodium (49 g ai ha−1 [0.04 lb ai ac−1]), rimsulfuron (53 g ai ha−1 [0.05 lb ai ac−1]), sulfosulfuron (53 g ai ha−1 [0.05 lb ai ac−1]), and imazapic (105 g ai ha−1 [0.09 lb ai ac−1]). Rimsulfuron and flufenacet plus metribuzin applied PRE provided > 90% control 10 mo after treatment (MAT). Rimsulfuron and sulfosulfuron applied EPOST provided > 90% control 9 MAT. Herbicide injury to bluebunch and intermediate wheatgrass was negligible across treatments. Imazapic and sulfosulfuron applied EPOST resulted in significant injury to smooth brome and timothy. In our second study, we addressed the following question: Will fall herbicide plus fertilizer treatments improve V. dubia control compared with herbicide treatments alone? We imposed fall herbicide treatments in main plots and fertilizer treatments (fall N, fall P, fall K, fall PK, spring N, NPK) in split plots at three study locations. Herbicide treatments resulted in high levels of V. dubia control. Differences in V. dubia abundance among fertilizer treatments were negligible 9 MAT. Within herbicide control plots, spring N and NPK treatments resulted in significant increases in perennial grass cover and decreases in V. dubia cover (9 MAT). This result indicates that spring N applications timed to the onset of perennial grass growth could be utilized as a component of an integrated management strategy for V. dubia in invaded perennial grass systems.

Nomenclature: Flufenacet; imazapic; metribuzin; propoxycarbazone-sodium; rimsulfuron, sulfosulfuron; ventenata, Ventenata dubia (Leers) Coss. VENDU; bluebunch wheatgrass, Pseudoroegneria spicata (Pursh) Á. Love PSESP; intermediate wheatgrass, Thinopyrum intermedium Host THIIN; smooth brome, Bromus inermis Leyss. BROIN; timothy, Phleum pratense L. PHLPR.

Management Implications: Ventenata dubia is an increasingly problematic invasive annual grass in the Intermountain Pacific Northwest. In the Palouse Bioregion, V. dubia has reduced forage production in hay and pasture, can negatively affect wildlife habitat and soil erosion management goals within Conservation Reserve Program (CRP) lands, and has invaded canyon grasslands and Palouse Prairie remnants. Currently, little information is available to land managers about how to control V. dubia across the range of perennial grass systems in which it invades. We used two field experiments to identify effective herbicide control options that also limit potential herbicide injury to perennial grass s

© 2016 Weed Science Society of America
John M. Wallace and Timothy S. Prather "Herbicide Control Strategies for Ventenata dubia in the Intermountain Pacific Northwest," Invasive Plant Science and Management 9(2), 128-137, (1 April 2016). https://doi.org/10.1614/IPSM-D-16-00017.1
Received: 2 March 2016; Accepted: 1 April 2016; Published: 1 April 2016
KEYWORDS
fertilization
integrated weed management
invasive plants
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