Abstract

Field studies were conducted on certified organic land in Lafayette and Vincennes, IN, in 2023 to determine the impact of different between-row weed control methods on weed suppression and sweetpotato yield. Between-row treatments consisted of organic buckwheat (108 kg ha−1) broadcast seeded immediately after sweetpotato transplanting followed by silage tarping from 3 wk after transplanting (WATr) through harvest, organic buckwheat (108 kg ha−1) broadcast seeded 3 WATr and terminated 7 WATr, and cultivation as a grower standard. Weed density at 6 WATr was 0, 184, and 162 plants m−2 for the silage tarping, living mulch buckwheat, and cultivation treatments, respectively. Total yield was 11,048 kg ha−1 for the living mulch buckwheat, 19,792 kg ha−1 for the cultivation, and 17,814 kg ha−1 for the tarping treatments. Tarping effectively suppressed weeds and produced sweetpotato yields comparable to cultivation, indicating the potential for use by organic growers. When buckwheat was grown between rows 3 to 7 WATr, sweetpotato yield was lower than it was with tarping and cultivation. These results suggest that researchers should be evaluating tarps for small-acreage farmers as a weed management strategy.

Comments

This is the publisher PDF of Cooper E, Meyers SL, Jennings K, Adair A, Gibson KD, Johnson WG. Effect of buckwheat and silage tarps on sweetpotato between-row weed control. Weed Technology. 2025;39:e17.Published CC-BY through Cambridge University Press, the version of record is also available at DOI: 10.1017/wet.2024.69.

Keywords

Buckwheat, Fagopyrum esculentum Moench, sweetpotato, Ipomoea batatas (L.) Lam. ‘Covington’, cover crop, weed interference

Date of this Version

2-21-2025

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Horticulture Commons

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