Fruit & Vegetable Magazine

Features Fruit Production
Sowing clover mats to shelter weed seed eaters

March 25, 2008  By Fruit & Vegetable


An ecologist in Illinois is
experimenting with a novel method for enlisting nature’s seed-eaters –
birds, rodents and insects, in this case – to help fight giant ragweed,
velvetleaf and giant foxtail, all major weed pests.

An ecologist in Illinois is experimenting with a novel method for enlisting nature’s seed-eaters – birds, rodents and insects, in this case – to help fight giant ragweed, velvetleaf and giant foxtail, all major weed pests. Adam Davis’ approach is to create a natural ground cover of red clover in farm fields so that the small critters will spend more time foraging for the weeds’ energy-rich seeds and less time dodging hawks or other sharp-eyed predators. If creating such a haven for seed foragers sounds far-fetched, consider this: A single female cricket will eat up to 50 foxtail seeds a day. Mice and ground squirrels eat even more, according to Davis. Using wire cages baited with seed, along with computer modeling, Davis is compiling data to estimate the impact of small animals’ seed foraging on annual weed populations in wheat fields where the clover covers are used. He is also comparing wheat-clover fields with clover-free corn and soybean crops. In another project, Davis is conducting field surveys of weed-seed concentrations on soil surfaces, in cracks, and on upright plants during harvest. He plans on furnishing information gleaned from the surveys to agricultural engineers who can build what Davis calls a “weed-seed-predator combine kit.” As he envisions it, the kit would include a vacuum head and special hammers for sucking up, crushing and spitting out destroyed weed seeds as the combine moves through a field harvesting the crop. Developed commercially, the kit could prove especially useful to organic farmers, who rank weeds as their top production problem, according to Davis.

Advertisement

Print this page

Advertisement

Stories continue below