Imperial Valley Press

Advisors seek practical use of steam in weed control

- By Bob Johnson

Steam-treating a shallow band of soil within the seed line before planting may offer, when combined with advanced cultivator­s, an economical weed control option for organic farmers and convention­al growers looking to reduce herbicide use.

University of California specialist­s said their research in Salinas Valley vegetable fields this year showed the technique can significan­tly reduce weed pressure and hand-weeding time, and even produce larger and more vigorous lettuce plants.

“We’re reducing the hand-weeding time,” UC Cooperativ­e Extension weed specialist Steve Fennimore said. “The plants were larger, significan­tly larger.”

Fennimore, who has been studying steam as a way to control weeds and soil diseases since strawberry growers first faced the loss of the fumigant methyl bromide, presented his latest research during the UC Online 2020 Pest Management Series in early November.

Steam works as well as fumigation in reducing weeds and soil-borne disease pressure, he said, but previous efforts have shown that treating the entire bed can be too expensive and time-consuming to be practical in most situations.

“With banded steam, you treat less of the bed,” Fennimore said. “Our target would be to heat the soil to about 150 degrees Fahrenheit; but you would only need to steam 2 or 3 inches deep. Then you could seed lettuce in the seed line and cultivate outside of it.”

Fennimore and UC graduate research fellow Nelly Guerra tested steam this year in three Salinas Valley trials — two on lettuce and the third on spinach — as they compared weed pressure after steam-treating the seed line with and without hydrogen peroxide, an organicall­y approved compound that helps spread the heat. In one of the trials, the steam reduced hairy nightshade and shepherd’s purse weeds by 80 percent to 90 percent, and little mallow by 70 percent with the hydrogen peroxide and 42 percent without.

The researcher­s said banded steam showed similar efficacy in the second lettuce trial, reducing nightshade and shepherd’s purse by 75 percent to 90 percent, and significan­tly reducing little mallow when the hydrogen peroxide was added to the steam.

The steam treatment reduced hand-weeding time by 20 percent to 40 percent, and reduced lettuce-drop damage by 54 percent to 67 percent, they said.

Another set of Salinas Valley vegetable trials showed the promise of GPS-controlled, autonomous weeders that cultivate without a driver, outside and within the seed line. “This project comes down to labor,” said Elizabeth Mosqueda, weed science professor at California State University, Monterey Bay. “It takes a lot of manpower to remove weeds from one lettuce field. How can we decrease labor costs in leafy green production? The other part of this is the number of herbicides available; the last formulatio­n for lettuce was introduced in 2014.”

Mosqueda tested two autonomous weeders in Salinas-area commercial lettuce fields: the relatively small DINO weeder from France and the larger Farmwise Titan robotic weeder.

“Both of these companies want to get to the point that one operator can be in the field with multiple machines,” Mosqueda said. “But autonomous weeders can already weed between and within rows at the same time.” The time saved by using the autonomous weeders that cultivate within the rows varied with the amount of weed pressure in the three fields where they were tested, she said: Field one had exceptiona­lly light weed pressure, and the autonomous cultivator­s did not save hand-weeding time. But in field two, with higher weed pressure, hand- weeding time was reduced from 11.1 hours per acre to 9.4 hours. The greatest reduction in hand-weeding time, from 16.9 hours to 9.9 hours, came in the most heavily infested third field.

“Our autonomous weeders controlled about 85 percent of the weeds, compared to 40 percent with a standard cultivator,” Mosqueda said. “The uncultivat­ed seed line is the area of concern. Weeds between the plants are typically removed by hand.”

Although advanced cultivator­s may be the answer to more effective control of weeds after they emerge, Fennimore said steam could become a more economical method of preventing emergence. “How do you get pre-emergent weed control that is compliant with organic regulation­s?” he asked. “Steam is the oldest method of soil disinfesta­tion. The guys in Denmark have shown it can be an economical method of weed control.”

Treating just a shallow, narrow band of soil within the seed line makes steam more affordable, but Fennimore said he hopes to go even further in reducing the time, fuel and money needed to use steam.

 ?? COURTESY PHOTO STEVE FENNIMORE, UCCE ?? After testing steam treatments in three Salinas Valley trials this year, UC Cooperativ­e Extension specialist­s say they believe the technique can significan­tly reduce weed pressure in lettuce and spinach fields, and can cut hand-weeding time.
COURTESY PHOTO STEVE FENNIMORE, UCCE After testing steam treatments in three Salinas Valley trials this year, UC Cooperativ­e Extension specialist­s say they believe the technique can significan­tly reduce weed pressure in lettuce and spinach fields, and can cut hand-weeding time.

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