28
Turfgrass Turfgrass

Turfgrass. Uneven fertilization Fertilizer injury Management Problems

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: Turfgrass. Uneven fertilization Fertilizer injury Management Problems

TurfgrassTurfgrass

Page 2: Turfgrass. Uneven fertilization Fertilizer injury Management Problems

Uneven fertilization

Fertilizer injury

Management ProblemsManagement Problems

Page 3: Turfgrass. Uneven fertilization Fertilizer injury Management Problems

Dog urine

Drought

Page 4: Turfgrass. Uneven fertilization Fertilizer injury Management Problems

Bird damage

Dull mower blade

Page 5: Turfgrass. Uneven fertilization Fertilizer injury Management Problems

Insect ProblemsInsect Problems

Page 6: Turfgrass. Uneven fertilization Fertilizer injury Management Problems

Sod WebwormCT: 150-500 per square foot1 year life cycle (1 to 3 generations)Control: beneficial nematodes (Scanmask)

Sevin, Spinosad, Merit, MACH 2, TempoBacillus thuringiensis (BT)

Page 7: Turfgrass. Uneven fertilization Fertilizer injury Management Problems

BillbugCT: 30 – 50 per square ftOne year life cycleControl: beneficial nematodes

Sevin, Diazinon,MACH 2 (for larvae)Merit

Page 8: Turfgrass. Uneven fertilization Fertilizer injury Management Problems

Black Turfgrass AtaeniusLife cycle: one to two generations per yearCT: 8 - 20 per square footControl: beneficial nematodes (Scanmask or Cruiser)

Sevin, Merit, MACH 2, Bt

Page 9: Turfgrass. Uneven fertilization Fertilizer injury Management Problems

May/June BeetleCT: 3-4 per square footLife cycle: 1 to 4 yearsControl: Sevin, Merit, MACH 2

nemotodes (Scanmask, Cruiser), Bt

Page 10: Turfgrass. Uneven fertilization Fertilizer injury Management Problems

Disease Disease ProblemsProblems

Page 11: Turfgrass. Uneven fertilization Fertilizer injury Management Problems

Pink Snow Mold (Fusarium nivalis)• Avoid heavy fall fertilization• Avoid heavy snow accumulation when shoveling snow• Apply fungicides to affected areas in fall

and early spring

Page 12: Turfgrass. Uneven fertilization Fertilizer injury Management Problems

Gray Snow Mold (Typhuyla sp.)

• Avoid heavy snow accumulation when shoveling snow• Spread snow or apply black fly ash or graphite• Apply fungicides to affected areas in late fall

Page 13: Turfgrass. Uneven fertilization Fertilizer injury Management Problems

Melting out (Helminthosporium sp.)

• Aerate to reduce thatch in early spring• Avoid single heavy nitrogen application in spring• Water deeply and infrequently

Page 14: Turfgrass. Uneven fertilization Fertilizer injury Management Problems

Necrotic Ring Spot(Leptosphaeria korrae)

• Aerate to reduce thatch in

early spring• Nitrogen fertilizer applied

frequently at low rates• Deep, infrequent water• Mow 2.5 to 3 inches• Replant with resistant varieties

Page 15: Turfgrass. Uneven fertilization Fertilizer injury Management Problems

Summer Patch(Magnaporthe graminicola)

• Aerate to reduce thatch in

early spring• Nitrogen fertilizer applied

frequently at low rates• Deep, infrequent water• Mow 2.5 to 3 inches• Replant with resistant varieties

Page 16: Turfgrass. Uneven fertilization Fertilizer injury Management Problems

Fairy Ring (Basidiomycete sp.)

• Fertilize adequately to mask effects of disease• Aerate to improve water penetration in rings• Prostar fungicide provides suppression

Page 17: Turfgrass. Uneven fertilization Fertilizer injury Management Problems

Powdery Mildew (Erysiphe graminis)

• Don’t plant in heavy shade, or use shade varieties• Water deeply and infrequently• Apply fungicides where there’s a history of mildew

Page 18: Turfgrass. Uneven fertilization Fertilizer injury Management Problems

Weed Weed ProblemsProblems

Page 19: Turfgrass. Uneven fertilization Fertilizer injury Management Problems

Black medic (Medicago lupulina)

• Apply postemergence broadleaf herbicides during periods of active growth from late spring through early summer and again from early through mid-autumn (dicamba, triclopyr)

• Hand pull

Page 20: Turfgrass. Uneven fertilization Fertilizer injury Management Problems

Dandelion (Taraxacum officinale)

• Apply postemergence broadleaf herbicides

from early through mid-autumn (all broadleaf herbicides)

• Hand dig, include complete root

Page 21: Turfgrass. Uneven fertilization Fertilizer injury Management Problems

Knotweed(Polygonum supina)

• Apply postemergencebroadleaf herbicides in spring (dicamba, triclopyr), pre-emergent herbicides when forsythia bloom

• Hand pull

Page 22: Turfgrass. Uneven fertilization Fertilizer injury Management Problems

Prostrate spurge (Euphorbia spp.)

• Apply postemergencebroadleaf herbicides in spring (triclopyr), pre-emergent herbicides when

forsythia bloom• Hand pull

Page 23: Turfgrass. Uneven fertilization Fertilizer injury Management Problems

White Clover(Trifolium repens)

• Apply postemergencebroadleaf herbicides in mid-spring to early summer and/or mid to late fall when actively growing (dicamba, triclopyr)• Maintain turf density and health through proper culture. Do not fertilize heavily with phosphorus.

Page 24: Turfgrass. Uneven fertilization Fertilizer injury Management Problems

Henbit(Lamium amplexicaule)

• Maintain turf density and health through proper culture, avoid seeding in fall; hoe or hand pull• Apply postemergence herbicides from mid through

late spring and again from mid to late autumn. Preemergence herbicides should be applied in late summer before germination.

Page 25: Turfgrass. Uneven fertilization Fertilizer injury Management Problems

Plantain(Plantago major,or lanceolata)

• very tolerant of harsh compacted, wet or dry conditions

• physically remove short, tough root system when the soil is moist

• Apply herbicides spring or fall (combination of 2,4-D &/or MCPP, dicamba, triclopyr, clopyralid)

Page 26: Turfgrass. Uneven fertilization Fertilizer injury Management Problems

Musk Thistle(Carduus nutans)

• low maintenance areas and roadsides

• biennial, reproduction by seed• consistent mowing and good

nitrogen fertilization create competitive turf

Page 27: Turfgrass. Uneven fertilization Fertilizer injury Management Problems

Wild violet(Viola papilionacea)

• colonize shaded, well fertilized, moist areas and easily out-compete cool-season turf

• hand digging of small clumps can be very effective if the entire root system is removed.

• Herbicides have limited effectiveness (combination product repeatedly applied beginning in May)

Page 28: Turfgrass. Uneven fertilization Fertilizer injury Management Problems

Annual weedy grasses

• preemergent control applied 2 weeks prior to germination (soil temp = 55º to 58º for several consecutive days)