Learn When Weeds Shed Their Seeds (And Why It Matters!)

A weed without seeds at harvest time is a lost cause for harvest weed seed control. That’s why GROW researchers from 14 states across the Mid-Atlantic, Midwest and South did the hard work of measuring when weeds in their region dropped their seeds (also known as seed shatter) for two years back in 2016.

Palmer amaranth weeds tend to retain their seeds well through soybean harvest, making them a good candidate for harvest weed seed control. (Photo credit: Ben Beale, U of MD Extension)

The all-important deadline? Soybean harvest. The researchers measured the seed retention and shatter of major broadleaf and grassy weeds at soybean maturity and then every week afterward for four weeks — i.e. when combines would most likely be running through soybean fields.

Some big takeaways emerged from the sprawling dataset. First, southern weeds held on to their weed seeds for longer than their northern brethren, and broadleaf seeds also proved clingier than grassy weed seeds. And while some weeds (such as Palmer amaranth) were quite consistent in their seed shedding, others (such as common ragweed) showed wide variability in their seed shatter timeframes.

Overall, the top five broadleaf weeds that best retained their weed seeds throughout the soybean harvest time period were smooth pigweed, Palmer amaranth, hemp sesbania, waterhemp, and jimsonweed. Given that several of those are major herbicide-resistant troublesome weeds (we’re looking at you, waterhemp and Palmer amaranth), that’s good news for farmers looking to use seed impact mills or chaff lining to control them.

In the grassy weed world, however, only Johnsongrass hung onto its weed seeds long enough to be a good candidate for harvest weed seed control.

If you’d like to sift through the data and findings on your own, you can find the broadleaf weed seed shatter study here, and its grass weed companion here.

But if you’re looking for a quick glimpse at the biggest takeaways discussed here, check out our newest GROW factsheet on this research here and below.


Article and factsheet by Emily Unglesbee, GROW