Managing weeds in the greenhouse

Managing weeds in the greenhouse

With due diligence, greenhouse growers can avoid weeds becoming an ongoing headache.

The gardening season has come and, as every year before this one, gardeners will spend a significant amount of time battling weeds. While greenhouse growers may grow their plants inside a controlled environment, they do not have the luxury of avoiding weeds and the problems they create. From outside to inside the greenhouse, weeds can cause headaches that may become persistent if not controlled. However, weeds can be managed with a little diligence and persistence.

The problem with weeds

Weeds are commonly defined as a "plant out of place." However, weeds aren't problematic in greenhouse crop production simply because they are out of place. There are several problems they create for containerized-greenhouse-crop production. Weeds left to go to seed, whether outside or inside the greenhouse, can produce seeds that can contaminate the growing area and, worst of all, containers with plants growing in them (Fig. 1). Containerized plants with weeds growing in them have a reduced or no marketability — or increase costs to make them marketable. Weeds serve as a refuge for insects, supporting populations of pests that can infest crops and transmit viruses. Weeds can also serve as host plants and carry diseases that may infect crops.

Prevention

The most efficient way to manage weeds is to keep them from establishing around and inside greenhouse facilities. There are no pre-emergent herbicides labeled for use in a greenhouse, so weeds need to be prevented from establishing in the greenhouse.

There are several ways to keep weeds from entering the facility. First, keep the perimeter outside of the facility clean: Regular mowing can help keep weeds from developing and, most importantly, producing seed which can be carried inside. In addition to managing vegetation through mowing, an even cleaner perimeter can be maintained by using rock mulch.

Like the perimeter of the greenhouse, also keep the interior clean. Cement floors are the easiest surface to keep free of weeds. Bare soil should always be avoided inside the greenhouse, just like outside of the facility. Crushed gravel and weed-barrier landscape fabric can be used to cover any bare ground that would allow weeds to establish. In addition to minimizing bare ground, free and standing water should be reduced by modifying irrigation practices as cultural practices allows — this will inhibit weed growth and development on floors.

Another source of weeds can be growing substrate. Before reusing any old substrate that has been stored outside or using any field soil coming in from outdoors, be sure to pasteurize it to make sure that weed seed therein isn't viable. The most common practice is to steam substrate for 30 minutes.


One easy way to prevent weeds from getting into the greenhouse is to keep the perimeter outside of the facility clean.

Control

Although preventing weeds should be a priority, it is common to have to control them after they are established. Once this happens in and around facilities, additional steps are needed to prevent them from spreading further

One of the first steps to take is to reduce or eliminate weeds surrounding the greenhouse. Large areas can be mowed; however, to avoid a mass-migration of insects from outside to the inside the facility as weeds die, kill insect pests in weeds first before killing the weeds themselves. This will reduce pest populations to prevent pests from heading into the greenhouse.

Weeds serve as a refuge for insects, supporting pests that can infest crops and transmit viruses. Weeds can also serve as host plants and carry diseases.

In addition to mowing, herbicides can be used to manage weeds outside the facility. When herbicides are used around the exterior greenhouse perimeter, be sure to avoid any adverse impacts on plants inside the structure. Drift after herbicide application can damage plants inside the greenhouse, so be sure to keep all vents and other air inlets closed when the exterior areas are treated with herbicide. Additionally, avoiding herbicides that easily volatilize will help minimize the risk of drift and phytotoxicity to crops inside the facility.

Take-home message

The list of tasks to keep up with in any greenhouse is long, but attention is best focused on growing marketable plants instead of growing weeds. From the outside to the inside, a variety of cultural, mechanical and chemical approaches can be used to manage weeds in production. Take a proactive approach to minimizing weeds and the negative impacts weeds can have on production. This will focus attention to the plants in the greenhouse that matter most.

Source: Greenhouse Management

Photos courtesy of Christopher J. Currey

Source: Greenhouse Management

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