Description
Field bindweed,
a perennial, reproduces by seeds and rootstocks. The root system
is extensive, extending to a depth of 20 to 30 feet. The smooth,
slender stems twine or spread over the soil and vegetation. Leaves
up to 2 inches long are alternate, simple, petioled, quite variable
in size, and highly variable in shape. The leaf blade may be oblong
to elliptical or may be rounded to pointed with spreading basal
lobes. Flowers are white, pink, or white with pink. Funnel shaped,
they are about 1 inch across and usually borne singly in the axils
of leaves. The flower stalk has two bracts 1/2 to 2 inches below
the flower; the bracts, along with leaf shape and small flower size
distinguish this plant from hedge bindweed. Seeds are dark, brownish-gray,
about 1/8 inch long, and have one rounded and two flattened sides.
How to Reduce
New Bindweed Infestations
Field bindweed is spread
both by seed and by roots. New field bindweed infestations result
from planting crop seed contaminated with bindweed seed or from
portions of bindweed roots transported by tillage machinery. Harvesting
equipment, manure from livestock fed contaminated feed, and grazing
animals moved from infested to clean areas also cause new bindweed
infestations. Seed is carried by birds, on feet of animals, or on
wheels of machinery; and seeds or plant parts can be spread by road
machinery. Bindweed seed is also carried in drainage water.
Small grain, forage,
and legume seed should be cleaned before planting to remove seed
of bindweed and other weeds. For livestock feed, one should use
grain, hay, and other feedstuffs not infested with bindweed or other
weeds difficult to control. If bindweed infested feed is fed to
livestock the manure should not be spread on bindweed free land.
Harvesting, tillage, and other machinery should be cleaned before
it leaves a bindweed infested field.
Bindweed Control
Practices
Control of field bindweed
shall mean preventing the production of viable seed and destroying
the plant's ability to reproduce by vegetative means.
Bindweed seed is viable
after remaining dormant in the soil for many years. Seeds brought
near the soil surface by tillage, rodents, or other means will germinate
under favorable conditions, resulting in new bindweed infestations.
Effective field bindweed
control can be achieved by applying appropriate control practices.
In developing a bindweed control program, one should consider the
various alternative control practices and use one or more appropriate
control practices for a particular cropland or noncropland area.
Field Bindweed
Control Practices for Cropland
Practices approved for
controlling bindweed on cropland are: (1) Plant competitive crops,
(2) Appropriate and timely cultivation, and (3) Application of herbicides
registered for use in infested crops or on crop land with no growing
crop. Often a combination of control practices results in a more
effective program than does a single practice.
Competitive Cropping
- Close-drilled sorghum or sudan grass seeded about July 1, after
a period of intensive cultivation, provides effective competition
for field bindweed. Narrow row grain sorghum may also be used. The
effectiveness of all competitive crops depends on intensive cultivation
during the bindweed growing season when land is not in crop.
Appropriate and Timely
Cultivation - Intensive cultivation, if properly used, is effective
in killing established bindweed. Intensive cultivation alone, however,
is not usually practical because no crops can be grown during the
cultivation period. Cultivation used with competitive crops can
control bindweed. With small grains, the most favorable times for
beginning cultivation are in the spring after bindweed growth has
started, or in the fall after the grain has been harvested. The
depth for cultivation in medium heavy soil is 4 inches. Bindweed
cannot be controlled satisfactorily if cultivation is delayed as
long as 20 or 28 days after bindweed emergence.
Field Bindweed
Control Practices for Noncropland
Practices approved for
controlling bindweed on noncropland are: (1) hoeing and (2) application
of appropriate herbicides.
Hoeing
- In noncropland areas such as home gardens and flower beds and
for horticultural or forestry plants, thorough hoeing every 10 days
to 2 weeks during the growing season can control bindweed effectively.
It is essential to cut
off all plants at each hoeing. Bindweed plants missed in hoeing
replenish their reserves, which delays killing time. Results will
not be satisfactory if bindweed plants are left outside the hoed
area because those plants will supply food to the roots for a distance
of about 10 feet, preventing the killing of established bindweed
in the hoed area.
Herbicides Approved
for Controlling Field Bindweed
The following herbicides
may be used for cost-share with landowners. Other products labeled
and registered for use on this noxious weed in Kansas may be used
in accordance with label directions but are not available for cost-share.
Be sure to follow all label directions and precautions. For additional
information consult the current KSU publication of "Chemical
Weed Control for Field Crops, Pastures, Rangeland, and Noncropland".
- 2,4-D Amine or LV
Ester. Apply during active growth in spring when plant is in bud
stage or in fall after 12 inches of new growth.
- Dicamba (Banvel,
Clarity, Vanquish). After crop harvest, apply as spot treatment
to stubble, fallow or other cropland. Apply during bindweed growth
but before killing frost. Follow label directions & precautions.
- Dicamba + 2,4-D (Banvel
+ 2,4-D). Follow label directions and precautions.
- Glyphosate (Roundup).
Follow label directions and precautions.
- Dicamba + Glyphosate
(Banvel + Roundup). Follow label directions and precautions.
- Glyphosate + 2,4-D
(Roundup + 2,4-D). For suppression of field bindweed, apply when
the weed is actively growing and vines are 6 to 18 inches long.
Allow at least 7 days after treatment before tillage. Addition
of 0.5 - 1% ammonium sulfate by weight may increase performance.
Follow label directions and precautions.
- Picloram (Tordon).
A restricted use herbicide. Follow label directions and precautions.
- Picloram + 2,4-D
(Tordon + 2,4-D). A restricted use herbicide. Follow label directions
and precautions.
- Imazapyr (Arsenal).
Follow label directions and precautions.
- Fosamine (Krenite).
DO NOT APPLY TO CROPLAND. Follow label directions and precautions.
- Imazapic (Plateau).
Follow label directions and precautions.
- Quinclorac (Paramount,
Drive). Follow label directions and precautions.
BIOLOGICAL CONTROL
PRACTICES
There are no biological controls approved for field bindweed at
this time
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