Hilgardia
Hilgardia
Hilgardia
University of California
Hilgardia

Methyl bromide alternatives … Soil solarization provides weed control for limited-resource and organic growers in warmer climates

Authors

James J Stapleton
Richard H Molinar
Stuart K McFeeters
Kris Lynn-Patterson
Anil Shrestha

Authors Affiliations

J.J. Stapleton is Integrated Pest Management Plant Pathologist, UC Statewide IPM Program, UC Kearney Agricultural Center (KAC); R.H. Molinar is Small Farms Advisor, UC Cooperative Extension, Fresno County; S.K. McFeeters is GIS Assistant, Geographic Information Systems Facility, KAC; K. Lynn-Patterson is GIS Analyst, Geographic Information Systems Facility, KAC; A. Shrestha is Integrated Pest Management Weed Ecologist, UC Statewide IPM Program, KAC.

Publication Information

Hilgardia 59(2):84-89. DOI:10.3733/ca.v059n02p84. April 2005.

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Abstract

Organic farmers and limited-resource growers in the San Joaquin Valley and other agricultural areas in California—many of whom are ethnic minorities—encounter limited options and environmental constraints when seeking economically viable pest management methods. Over the past 8 years, we have conducted weed research and implementation projects on soil solarization at the UC Kearney Research and Extension Center and on farms in the surrounding San Joaquin Valley. In the Kearney studies, small-scale solarization in parsley reduced weed biomass 94% to 99% over the untreated control. Furthermore, in an on-farm study, solarization provided effective weed control for strawberries at a much lower cost than methyl bromide, with comparable yields. This research has provided guidelines and technical support for growers wishing to implement solarization and related techniques for nonchemical soil disinfestation in a wide variety of specialty crops.

References

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Stapleton JJ, Elmore CL, DeVay JE. Solarization and biofumigation help disinfest soil. Cal Ag. 2000. 54(6):42-5.

Stapleton JJ, Prather TS, Dahlquist RM. Implementation and validation of a thermal death database to predict efficacy of soil solarization for weed management in California. UC Plant Protect Quarterly. 2000. 10(3):9-10. www.uckac.edu/ppq.

Stapleton JJ, Prather TS, Mallek SB, et al. High temperature solarization for production of weed-free container soils and potting mixes. HortTech. 2002. 12:697-700.

[USDA] US Department of Agriculture. 2002 Census of Agriculture. 2004. National Agricultural Statistics Service, www.nass.usda.gov/census .

Stapleton J, Molinar R, McFeeters S, Lynn-Patterson K, Shrestha A. 2005. Methyl bromide alternatives … Soil solarization provides weed control for limited-resource and organic growers in warmer climates. Hilgardia 59(2):84-89. DOI:10.3733/ca.v059n02p84
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