Weed Management in Cranberries: A Historical Perspective and a Look to the Future

Integrated weed management (IWM) has been part of cranberry cultivation since its inception in the early 19th century. Proper site and cultivar selection, good drainage, rapid vine establishment, and hand weeding are as important now for successful weed management as when the industry first started....

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Main Author: Hilary A. Sandler
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2018-09-01
Series:Agriculture
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/2077-0472/8/9/138
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spelling doaj-1f9abeb536dd44119ab223dc3cc19c872021-04-02T15:24:52ZengMDPI AGAgriculture2077-04722018-09-018913810.3390/agriculture8090138agriculture8090138Weed Management in Cranberries: A Historical Perspective and a Look to the FutureHilary A. Sandler0University of Massachusetts-Amherst Cranberry Station, PO Box 569, East Wareham, MA 02538, USAIntegrated weed management (IWM) has been part of cranberry cultivation since its inception in the early 19th century. Proper site and cultivar selection, good drainage, rapid vine establishment, and hand weeding are as important now for successful weed management as when the industry first started. In 1940, Extension publications listed eight herbicides (e.g., petroleum-based products, inorganic salts and sulfates) for weed control. Currently, 18 herbicides representing 11 different modes of action are registered for use on cranberries. Nonchemical methods, such as hand weeding, sanding, flooding, and proper fertilization, remain integral for managing weed populations; new tactics such as flame cultivation have been added to the toolbox. Priority ratings have been developed to aid in weed management planning. Despite many efforts, biological control of weeds remains elusive on the commercial scale. Evaluation of new herbicides, unmanned aerial systems (UAS), image analysis, and precision agriculture technology; investigation of other management practices for weeds and their natural enemies; utilization of computational decision making and Big Data; and determination of the impact of climate change are research areas whose results will translate into new use recommendations for the weed control of cranberry.http://www.mdpi.com/2077-0472/8/9/138herbicidesprecision agriculturebig dataanalytic hierarchy processingflame cultivationwet blade technologyunmanned aerial systemsweed priorities
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Hilary A. Sandler
spellingShingle Hilary A. Sandler
Weed Management in Cranberries: A Historical Perspective and a Look to the Future
Agriculture
herbicides
precision agriculture
big data
analytic hierarchy processing
flame cultivation
wet blade technology
unmanned aerial systems
weed priorities
author_facet Hilary A. Sandler
author_sort Hilary A. Sandler
title Weed Management in Cranberries: A Historical Perspective and a Look to the Future
title_short Weed Management in Cranberries: A Historical Perspective and a Look to the Future
title_full Weed Management in Cranberries: A Historical Perspective and a Look to the Future
title_fullStr Weed Management in Cranberries: A Historical Perspective and a Look to the Future
title_full_unstemmed Weed Management in Cranberries: A Historical Perspective and a Look to the Future
title_sort weed management in cranberries: a historical perspective and a look to the future
publisher MDPI AG
series Agriculture
issn 2077-0472
publishDate 2018-09-01
description Integrated weed management (IWM) has been part of cranberry cultivation since its inception in the early 19th century. Proper site and cultivar selection, good drainage, rapid vine establishment, and hand weeding are as important now for successful weed management as when the industry first started. In 1940, Extension publications listed eight herbicides (e.g., petroleum-based products, inorganic salts and sulfates) for weed control. Currently, 18 herbicides representing 11 different modes of action are registered for use on cranberries. Nonchemical methods, such as hand weeding, sanding, flooding, and proper fertilization, remain integral for managing weed populations; new tactics such as flame cultivation have been added to the toolbox. Priority ratings have been developed to aid in weed management planning. Despite many efforts, biological control of weeds remains elusive on the commercial scale. Evaluation of new herbicides, unmanned aerial systems (UAS), image analysis, and precision agriculture technology; investigation of other management practices for weeds and their natural enemies; utilization of computational decision making and Big Data; and determination of the impact of climate change are research areas whose results will translate into new use recommendations for the weed control of cranberry.
topic herbicides
precision agriculture
big data
analytic hierarchy processing
flame cultivation
wet blade technology
unmanned aerial systems
weed priorities
url http://www.mdpi.com/2077-0472/8/9/138
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