In Canadian agriculture, few problems are as persistent or costly as perennial broadleaf weeds. These hardy competitors are distinguished from annuals by their robust underground parts, such as rhizomes, creeping roots, or taproots, which support their longevity and complicate control efforts. From Canada thistle to dandelion to perennial sow-thistle, perennials are recurrent weeds that, left unchecked, can drastically cut into crop yields and farm profits.
Control strategies are most effective when they are timed to target perennial weeds at their growth stages when they are most vulnerable. By studying the annual cycle of perennials, farmers can determine when and how to deploy herbicides or other management practices for maximum impact.
Perennial Weed Biology: Understanding Survival Tactics
Perennials’ underground networks distinguish them from annual and biennial broadleaf weeds that complete their life cycle in one or two seasons, respectively. These networks store energy reserves and nutrients, allowing plants to regenerate following mechanical damage or incomplete chemical control.
Three primary underground structures define perennial weeds:
- Taproots – Vertical, carrot-shaped roots found in dandelions or field bindweed.
- Creeping roots – Horizontal roots that grow near the soil surface like Canada thistle.
- Rhizomes – Horizontal stems that lie underground, like johnsongrass.
In each case, carbohydrates and other reserves are conserved in underground parts during the winter to fuel early spring regrowth. These reserves allow perennials to re-sprout and recover even after top growth is controlled through tillage, mowing, or herbicides. And disturbing roots with tillage or mowing can actually spread perennials by leaving behind pieces that grow into new plants.
Managing perennials effectively, therefore, often requires a long-term, multi-year strategy aimed at exhausting both above-ground shoots and subterranean reserves. Let’s look closer at the seasonal growth stages of perennial broadleaf weeds to see how timing and biology can inform control decisions.
The Perennial Broadleaf Weed Life Cycle and Vulnerable Stages
Seasonal growth stages of perennials are marked by changes in biomass distribution, nutrient needs, and energy reserves. Examining when and how these shifts occur can help us align control practices with the biology of the plants for the best results.
Early Vegetative Stage: Spring Emergence
When perennials break dormancy in the spring, energy is transferred from roots to shoots in a bidirectional movement of carbohydrates that fuels initial growth. Herbicide uptake is possible, but translocation of the product back to roots is minimal at this time. The plant is actively growing, so control treatments can work, but they must be timed carefully.
Rapid Growth and Pre-Flowering
After initial top growth, the plant enters a phase of rapid shoot growth. Now, nutrient movement becomes bidirectional, flowing both up to shoots and down into roots. At this growth stage, systemic herbicides are particularly effective if used in conjunction with other practices.
Flowering and Reproductive Phase
The flowering stage is often when farmers choose to act. And for good reason. Visible top growth makes identification easy, and it’s at this point that most herbicides will work.
However, in the case of systemic herbicides, this may not be the ideal time for treatment. The above-ground portion of the plant will be competing for energy with developing seeds, so there is less likelihood of the plant being completely killed by a single treatment. Translocation may also be slower at this point in the growth cycle.
Fall Translocation
As the name suggests, this is when translocation in the plant shifts direction and moves from above- to below-ground storage organs in preparation for winter. This makes fall herbicide treatments effective, since the active ingredients are translocated along with the carbohydrates and achieve “root kill” as part of the process.
Targeting Key Growth Stages for Control
Identifying and understanding growth stages is only half the battle, and perennial broadleaf weed control will not be successful if strategic follow-up is not implemented. The goal with perennial control is to either prevent re-growth or exhaust the plant’s subterranean reserves. To this end, farmers can target multiple windows of opportunity over the course of the growth cycle.
Apply Systemic Herbicides at Optimal Times
Glyphosate and dicamba products are labelled for use on perennials, but timing of application can make a big difference in their effectiveness. Contact herbicides may work on top growth, but often fail to affect the roots. Systemic products, on the other hand, are taken up by the plant and moved around to kill the root. It follows, then, that late summer into fall is an ideal time to apply systemic herbicides and allow them to be drawn down into roots.
Combine Mechanical and Chemical Methods
Tillage can be part of the solution, but without a preceding herbicide application to kill root systems, tillage alone may only serve to spread perennials by fragmenting and dispersing roots.
Maintain Vigorous Crop Competition
A dense, healthy crop canopy is the best defense against perennials. When nutrient resources are limited and field space is at a premium, the ability of the crop to compete for both can be enough to suppress weed emergence and re-growth.
Integrated Long-Term Perennial Weed Management
Perennials are a long-term challenge, and the integrated use of crop protection solutions is often required for complete control over multiple years. Effective scouting and record keeping will be critical, as will the ability to match herbicide active ingredients to the targeted plant species. The use of different herbicide modes of action will also be essential to mitigate herbicide resistance development in any particular field.
Perennial weeds are some of the most serious threats to Canadian crop productivity and farm profits. They have several adaptations to survive in agricultural settings that differ from annual broadleaf weeds or grass species. Targeting herbicide applications and other management tactics at the points in the plant’s life cycle when the weed is most susceptible is critical to effective control.
With a little bit of know-how, it is possible to align practices with the growth cycle to reduce regrowth and weed pressure year after year. By coupling timing and biology with the right product and stewardship practices, perennials can be kept in check for sustainable, profitable production.