How to Manage Pests
UC Pest Management Guidelines
Onion and Garlic
Special Weed Problems
(Reviewed 1/07,
updated 6/08)
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In this Guideline:
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More about weeds in onion and garlic:
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YELLOW
SWEETCLOVER and WHITE SWEETCLOVER. These clovers are difficult to control in onion
and garlic because none of the registered herbicides will control them. Avoid
growing onion or garlic crops in fields known to be heavily infested with these
weeds.
NUTSEDGE.
Nutsedge is a serious weed in spring- and
summer-planted crops. Yellow and purple nutsedge are perennial weeds that
reproduce from underground tubers, which can survive for several years in the
soil. Each tuber contains several buds that are capable of producing plants.
Only one bud germinates at a time to form a new plant; however, if that bud or
plant is destroyed by cultivation or an herbicide, then a new bud is activated.
Control is best achieved by continuous cultivation during a summer fallow
period or by rotating to crops where effective herbicide and cultural control
methods can be used. Deep plowing with moldboard plows to bury tubers 10 to 12
inches can be used to significantly reduce the population. Dimethenamid
provides partial control of this weed if applied before emergence of the
nutsedge.
ANNUAL
BLUEGRASS. In the
lower Colorado River desert, annual bluegrass can reach very high plant
populations in a field and become difficult to control. In this area, some
fields can no longer be used to grow onions because of annual bluegrass. One
reason for this is the regular use of selective grass herbicides (sethoxydim
and fluazifop) that do not control annual bluegrass. Herbicides that control
annual bluegrass in the San Joaquin Valley and coastal valleys (DCPA and
bensulide on onions and pendimethalin on garlic) do not effectively control
annual bluegrass in the low desert area. Clethodim does control annual
bluegrass.
DODDER.
Dodder is a parasitic weed that can build up in onion fields in the San Joaquin
Valley and coastal valley growing areas. Avoid fields with a known history of
this weed. DCPA (onion and garlic) and pendimethalin (garlic only) suppress
and/or control this weed.
UC IPM Pest Management Guidelines: Onion and Garlic
UC ANR Publication 3453
Weeds
R. Smith, UC Cooperative Extension, Monterey County
S. A. Fennimore, Vegetable Crops/Weed Science, UC Davis/Salinas
S. Orloff, UC Cooperative Extension, Siskiyou County
G. J. Poole, UC Cooperative Extension, Los Angeles County
Acknowledgment for contributions to Weeds:
C. E. Bell, UC Cooperative Extension, San Diego County
D. W. Cudney, Botany and Plant Sciences, UC Riverside
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