The Encyclopaedia of Arable Weeds (2018 Edition)
The Encyclopaedia of Arable Weeds (2018 Edition)
The Encyclopaedia of Arable Weeds (2018 Edition)
of arable weeds
How to use this encyclopaedia
This publication provides an easy reference to the major broad-leaved
and grass weeds in the UK, including how to identify and manage them.
This encyclopaedia has been produced to fill the gap that exists in currently
available texts and to provide the reader, in one easy to use format, with a
better understanding of weeds, their distribution and biological characteristics
together with the best agricultural practice and the impact and importance of
both cultural and herbicide use.
It is not a manual on ‘how to do it’, but a source of reference based on an
accumulation of research and information about the weeds, their identification
and growing habits, to help the reader identify problem weeds and plan their
crop management.
Crop production is a competitive balance between crop and weed for light and
nutrients. A weed is a plant in an undesired place. It can often grow and
reproduce aggressively and/or harbour and spread pests or pathogens which
infect or degrade the quality of crops. Some can cause skin irritation or are
hazardous if eaten. Although many weeds have undesirable consequences
they can also provide feed for birds, are attractive to look at or fulfil a key
ecological role. Understanding weeds and their biology enables more effective
management. The Encyclopaedia of Arable Weeds provides this in an easily
usable format. Supplemented by its on-line partner edition, it provides an
essential tool for weed management in arable rotations.
Please note this publication was rebranded in 2018, not revised.
The information was correct at the time of printing in 2008.
Acknowledgements
This publication has been substantially based on the encyclopaedia in Weed
Manager, which was developed by: ADAS, BASF, Bayer CropScience, Dow
AgroSciences, DuPont, HGCA, Rothamsted Research, SAC, SRI, and
Syngenta under the Sustainable Arable LINK (Government sponsor Defra);
from which the vast majority of text and images are derived.
We are also very grateful to Susan Jellis (Folia Partners Ltd) for her work on the
glossary, editing and advice, and to Sarah Cook (ADAS) for editing texts.
3
Contents
4
Contents
5
Annual meadow-grass
Poa annua
Competitive in
S O N D J F M A M J J A
Location
Geographic location
Annual meadow-grass grows
nationwide and up to an altitude of Not present
1,200m. Unlikely
6
Description
Scale: 1 space = 1mm
Key features
Young plant: The leaves are light green and
flattened, with a curved tip; the undersides have a
distinctive central ridge.
Flowers: It flowers all year round.
Biology
Annual meadow-grass is the most common grass
weed in winter- and summer-sown arable crops
throughout most of the UK. As it can overwinter,
plants are found at all growth stages during the
year. It can complete its life cycle in 6 weeks.
Although most reproduction is by seed, annual
meadow-grass has long lateral roots and can also
regenerate from shoots detached from the main
plant by disturbance.
Annual meadow-grass poses little threat to
crop yield, but can delay ripening and interfere
with harvest.
Management
It is encouraged by minimum tillage compared to
ploughing. Residual herbicides control it both in
cereals and other crops.
It has developed resistance to some herbicides:
paraquat in hops and simazine in orchards.
7
Awned canary-grass
Phalaris paradoxa
Competitive in
Flowering
Germination
S O N D J F M A M J J A
Location
Geographic location
Awned canary-grass is a lowland weed,
especially in south Britain. Not present
Very likely
8
Scale: 1 space = 1mm
Description
It is a tufted annual grass up to 1m tall, freely
tillering, with long tapering leaves and a long
pointed ligule. The flowerheads are upright, broad
and densely packed with spikelets which have
green and white striped markings.
Key features
Flowers/fruit: The flowerheads fall intact when ripe.
Biology
Awned canary-grass is an annual grass which only
reproduces by seed. Although it is uncommon, it is
a fairly new but increasing problem. It is generally
found in the same areas as black-grass, in
moisture-retentive soils. It is competitive with
cereal crops.
It spreads initially from volunteers of previous
bird-seed crops. It is difficult to control with the
usual grass herbicides and can be a serious weed
in winter crops.
Management
Seeds may be buried by deep ploughing, and
leaving in the seedbank for 2–3 years. Cycloxydim
may be used in some broad-leaved crops.
9
Barley
Hordeum vulgare
Competitive in
S O N D J F M A M J J A
Location
Geographic location
Winter and spring barleys are found
as weeds in lowland areas, on road
verges and wasteland, as well as in
cereal crops.
Soil type
Weed barleys are found on all soil
types, though are less common in soils
under organic management.
10
Description
Scale: 1 space = 1mm
Key features
Young plant: The leaf blades are hairless and
yellow-green, with a clockwise twist.
Flowers/fruit: The nodding flowerheads have very
long awns.
Biology
Barley volunteers from the previous crop can
germinate after harvest if soil conditions are
favourable. The young plants persist overwinter and
will flower before the following wheat crop.
However, they seldom persist in the seedbank
beyond 2 years if controlled. Barley is a particular
nuisance as a weed in cereal seed crops, and in
milling and processing crops.
Management
It can be controlled with herbicides in broadleaved
crops and, with certain grass herbicides, in wheat.
11
Barren brome
Anisantha sterilis
Competitive in
Seeds/flower: 1 S O N D J F M A M J J A
Seeds/plant: 200
Location
Geographic location
Found mainly in England and the
arable areas of Scotland, barren Not present
brome is usually a lowland grass, Unlikely
but has been shown to reach
altitudes of over 350m. Its natural More likely
habitat includes verges, field Very likely
headlands and waste ground.
Soil type
It grows on waste or cultivated
land on well-drained soils.
12
Description Scale: 1 space = 1mm
Key features
Plant: The ligule is very pointed.
Flower: The long-awned drooping flowerhead is
tinged with purple after flowering.
Biology
Barren brome is a weed of winter crops, causing
lodging when present in large populations. Plants
overwinter with green leaves; seeds germinate
mainly in autumn. Spring-germinating seedlings can
flower the same year. Population increase is
favoured by cereal monoculture, early-autumn
cereal sowing, no-till cultivation and lack of break
crops. Seed germination is inhibited by drought and
by low temperatures after shedding. Barren brome
can be very competitive in the early stages of crop
growth of autumn-sown cereals, particularly where
the crop is established by reduced cultivations.
Management
Seed dormancy varies between populations but
is lost rapidly. Seed burial can induce dormancy.
Seed should be left on the soil surface as light
aids germination. Spray off with glyphosate prior
to drilling.
Barren brome is unlikely to emerge from a depth
>10cm so deep ploughing to 15cm immediately
after harvest helps control.
13
Black bent
Agrostis gigantea
Competitive in
Germination
S O N D J F M A M J J A
Location
Geographic location
Black bent is mainly found in
arable fields in lowland areas of Not present
England, the arable areas of Unlikely
Scotland and locally in Ireland.
More likely
Soil type
Very likely
It spreads in light sandy soils
where it reproduces both from
rhizomes and from seed. In
wetter soils it can propagate
only from rhizomes.
14
Description Scale: 1 space = 1mm
Key features
Plant: The leaves are dull, green and hairless; the
blades are flat, broad and taper to a point; the
sheaths are rounded and smooth.
Flowers: The large green or purplish flowerheads
are upright, oval and usually open, with many
branches carrying singleflowered spikelets.
Lookalikes
Black bent may be confused with creeping bent.
Biology
Black bent can develop into dense patches which
are often a problem in fields that are frequently
irrigated and where weather is cool. The plants can
reproduce vegetatively from fragments of rhizome.
Management
Spring cropping reduces vigour. When cultivating,
beware of breaking the rhizomes as black bent can
root from every broken node. Glyphosate used in
summer on uncropped land or pre-harvest in early
harvested crops controls rhizomes. Some residual
herbicides may affect the seedlings.
15
Black-bindweed
Fallopia convolvulus
Competitive in
S O N D J F M A M J J A
Location
Geographic location
Black-bindweed is mainly found
in lowland areas but can grow
up to an altitude of 400m, in Not present
arable, especially cereal crops, Unlikely
disturbed land, other bare
More likely
ground and road sides.
Very likely
Soil type
It grows on fertile, moist soils
with pH >5.
Key features
Seedling: The hypocotyl is crimson and the
cotyledons and first leaves reddish.
Plant: Although the leaves are heart-shaped
and resemble field bindweed, the lower lobes of
black-bindweed leaves are more rounded than
those of field bindweed.
Lookalikes
Young plants of black-bindweed can be confused
with those of field bindweed.
The difference is in the cotyledons; black-bindweed
has long cotyledons with short stalks, while field
bindweed has oval cotyledons, notched at the tip.
Biology
Black-bindweed is one of the most common weeds
of cereals; it occurs particularly in spring cereals
and in open crops of winter wheat. It is also found
in potato, beet and maize crops. It grows rapidly from
large seedlings mainly germinating in spring and is
deep rooting. Seeds are dispersed in cereal grains.
Plants germinating in autumn do not survive winter.
Management
In cereals, combinations of sulfonylureas and
hormonal and contact herbicides are often needed
for good control. In spring broadleaved crops and
maize, control can be variable if soil conditions are
dry and residual herbicides do not work well.
17
Black-grass
Alopecurus myosuroides
Competitive in
Seeds/plant: 800
Location
Geographic location
Black-grass is most abundant in Not present
cultivated land in south-east
England, but it is distributed all Unlikely
over the British Isles. It has More likely
gradually spread north and
west, recently appearing in Very likely
south-east Scotland and
Northumberland, but is still rare
in northern Scotland.
Soil type
It is found on heavy and light
soils, but thrives on heavy,
poorly drained soils.
18
Description Scale: 1 space = 1mm
19
Black mustard
Brassica nigra
Competitive in
S O N D J F M A M J J A
Location
Geographic location
Generally a lowland plant, black Not present
mustard grows persistently
near rivers, in flood plains, Unlikely
in arable field margins and in More likely
waste ground.
Very likely
Soil type
It prefers nutrient-rich and damp
clays and silts.
Key features
Leaves: The leaves are lobed and hairy.
Biology
Black mustard was formerly cultivated as mustard
seed, though it is now rarely grown. Although some
early-germinating plants overwinter they are not
hardy and seldom survive the winter, so seed
germinating in spring is more of a problem in
late-sown wheat and spring-sown crops.
Management
Use a stale seedbed approach before sowing
spring crops. Control seedlings with harrows and
established plants with hoeing. Black mustard can
be controlled with foliar-acting herbicides.
21
Black nightshade
Solanum nigrum
Competitive in
Location
Geographic location
Black nightshade is fairly Not present
widespread in vegetable crops,
gardens, vineyards and on Unlikely
banks and rubbish tips. More likely
Soil type Very likely
It prefers loose, free-draining,
nutrient-rich soils in the pH
range 5 to 7.
22
Description Scale: 1 space = 1mm
Key features
Young plant: The hypocotyls and cotyledons
are hairy.
Fruit: The fruit is spherical and glossy black.
Biology
Black nightshade is a common weed of vegetable
and spring legume crops. Flowers are pollinated by
insects and are self-fertile. It germinates in spring
and summer, fruiting in the same year. The seeds
are distrubuted by birds. It does not persist in
winter crop rotations and where there are large
grass breaks.
Management
There are a number of herbicides available to
control black nightshade in winter wheat but it is
easier to control the weed in uncropped land. In row
crops, use hoes where herbicides are not available.
Biotypes resistant to simazine have been found in
the UK.
23
Broad-leaved dock
Rumex obtusifolius
Competitive in
Location
Geographic location
Broad-leaved dock grows in Not present
meadows, pastures, ditches,
waste ground and neglected Unlikely
cultivated ground up to an More likely
altitude of 850m.
Very likely
Soil type
It prefers high-nitrogen,
humus-rich clay or loam soils.
24
Description Scale: 1 space = 1mm
Key features
Leaves: The blades of the first true leaves are
broad, rounded at the tip and heart-shaped at
the base.
Flowers: The margins of the flowers are toothed.
Fruit: The segments have spiny teeth.
Biology
Broad-leaved dock occurs more rarely on arable
land than does curled dock, with which it is able
to hybridise. It tends to grow in compacted and
damp soil around field edges and in gateways. It
overwinters as a rosette, flowering in the second
year. It can reproduce from root fragments detached
by ploughing.
Management
Broad-leaved dock can be controlled with
herbicides in cereals, grass and uncropped land,
but can be difficult to control in other crops except
by pulling or hoeing.
25
Canadian fleabane
Conyza canadensis
Competitive in
S O N D J F M A M J J A
Location
Geographic location
Canadian fleabane is a plant of Not present
open lowland habitats such as
gardens, waste ground, railway Unlikely
ballast and urban areas. More likely
Soil type Very likely
It grows on rough, stony, sandy
or drained loam soils with
some nitrogen.
26
Description Scale: 1 space = 1mm
Biology
Canadian fleabane only occurs sporadically but
increasingly in annual arable and vegetable crops,
e.g. carrot and parsnip.
Management
The rosettes can be destroyed by autumn
cultivations.
27
Charlock
Sinapis arvensis
Competitive in
Location
Geographic location
Charlock is generally a weed Not present
of lowland areas though it has
been found at altitudes up Unlikely
to 450m. It grows in open More likely
habitats, such as arable fields
or recently disturbed soil. Very likely
Soil type
It is found on well-aerated and
well-watered but drained,
alkaline-rich soils, which have
a high organic matter content.
Key features
Flowers: The flower sepals spread horizontally.
Fruit: The fruit has a beak 7mm or more long.
Biology
Charlock is common on arable land. It used to be a
serious weed of cereals, but it is now more
commonly found in broad-leaved crops. It is highly
competitive in cereals. It mainly germinates in
spring, but summer-germinating plants and plants
emerging in the autumn in early-sown oilseed rape
may survive a mild winter. The seeds can be
dispersed in crop seeds, or by ingestion by birds.
Management
Charlock is difficult to control in brassica crops but
is readily controlled by residual and foliar herbicides
in cereal and legume crops. Between 4 and 6 weeks
after germinating, its hairy leaf surface traps
herbicide so it is more susceptible at this stage.
29
Cleavers
Galium aparine
Competitive in
Location
Geographic location
Cleavers is found all over Britain Not present
except for the very highest
mountainous areas. It has Unlikely
spread north and west following More likely
the trends in winter cropping.
Very likely
Soil type
It is found on well-watered
humus-rich loam and clay soils
and grows best on highly
fertile soils.
Key features
Young plant: The oval cotyledons are notched at the tip.
Flowers: The flowers are white.
Lookalikes
Cleavers may be confused with ivy-leaved speedwell at
the cotyledon stage. Cleaver cotyledons are notched at
the tip and have longer cotyledon stalks. Cleavers may
also be confused with some hemp-nettles.
Biology
Cleavers can germinate and young plants continue to
grow over mild winters, although mature plants die
before frost starts. Adult cleavers plants are very
competitive; they can be very large and can choke
wheat crops by growing over the top of the canopy,
causing crop lodging and affecting combining. Seeds
are moved in crop grain or by clinging to fur or clothing
and require chilling before germination. A long autumn
germination period is supported in a winter cropping
system. 3% of oilseed rape samples are rejected
because they contain more than 4% of cleavers seed.
The seeds can also be difficult to remove from cereal
samples and cause losses of grain.
Management
Cleavers cannot be controlled purely by cultural
methods. Mechanical and tine weeders can be used
to remove a proportion of emerged cleavers within
the wheat crop. Ploughing may increase seedling
emergence, when seeds brought to the soil surface
germinate. There are a number of herbicides that can
be used to control cleavers in arable crops.
31
Cock’s-foot
Dactylis glomerata
Competitive in
S O N D J F M A M J J A
Location
Geographic location
Cock’s-foot is usually found in Not present
meadows, pastures, waste
ground, roadsides, or field Unlikely
edges. It grows to an altitude More likely
of 700m.
Very likely
Soil type
It is found on a wide range of
fertile, neutral or alkaline soils.
Key features
Plant: The stems are flattened, especially at the base.
Biology
Cock’s-foot is sown as an agricultural grass and may
be present in arable fields after ploughing. It remains
green all winter.
It mainly reproduces by seed which can persist from
2–3 years on the soil surface. Seed set is high and
the fruit fairly mobile.
Management
Although it is often found in first-year cereals after
grass, it seldom persists in routinely cultivated soils.
It is best controlled at the time of grass destruction or
in fallow.
33
Common chickweed
Stellaria media
Competitive in
Location
Geographic location
Common chickweed can be Not present
found all over Britain,
especially in crops, usually Unlikely
below an altitude of 200m but More likely
able to grow up to 400m.
Very likely
Soil type
It grows on fertile nitrogen-rich
soils which are not highly acid.
It prefers watered but not
waterlogged situations.
34
Description Scale: 1 space = 1mm
Key features
Plant: The stems are rounded with a single line
of hairs.
Leaves: The leaves are oval, usually 8mm or
longer, and end in a slight point.
Lookalikes
Common chickweed may be confused with common
mouse-ear.
Biology
Common chickweed can grow at relatively low
temperatures and may suppress overwintered crops
or, if dense, severely restrict crop growth. Germination
of chickweed can occur throughout the year, with up
to three generations possible in any one year in winter
cereals, particularly wheat; plants may be seen to be
flowering at any time. Spring-germinating plants die in
late summer, while autumn-germinating plants survive
the winter as a dense low-growing mat.
Plants may reproduce by seed, moved by birds,
or vegetatively by root cuttings.
Management
Control by preventing seed production and
re-establishment after cultivation. Early shallow tillage
encourages the seed germination; when the seedlings
emerge, the land should be tilled again and then
drilled with the crop.
Sulfonylurea resistance in chickweed has been
confirmed in the UK. Where sulfonylurea herbicides
are used, mix with a herbicide with an alternative
mode of action.
35
Common couch
Elytrigia repens
Competitive in
Location
Geographic location
Couch grows country-wide on Not present
fertile disturbed soils, waste
and cultivated ground up to Unlikely
an altitude of 430m. More likely
Soil type Very likely
It is present on all soil types
including seaside sands
and shingles.
Key features
Plant: As the rhizome extends, common couch
plantlets seem to grow in straight lines. The individual
plants have an upright form.
Flower: Spikelets lie flat against the stem so they
feel smooth when fingers are moved along the
flowerhead.
Lookalikes
The flowerhead is superficially similar to that of
rye-grass (Lolium spp.) but in rye-grass the narrow,
rounded side of the spikelet is adjacent to the stem.
Biology
Common couch is a highly competitive weed of all
crops. Mature shoots die back in the autumn but
young shoots can overwinter. The plant can
reproduce from rhizome fragments and from seed.
Management
Intensive cultivations at 2–3 week intervals will
fragment the rhizomes and induce growth, exhausting
food reserves. Bury the weakened rhizomes with
deep ploughing or spray with glyphosate. Control of
couch is cheaper and more effective with glyphosate
in uncropped land, stale seedbeds or combinable
crops than in break crops.
37
Common field-speedwell
Veronica persica
Competitive in
Location
Geographic location
Common field-speedwell Not present
grows up to an altitude of
350m and prefers flat or gently Unlikely
sloping ground. It is a common More likely
weed of arable land and other
bare soils such as disturbed or Very likely
waste ground.
Soil type
It prefers damp, nutrient-rich
loam soils, pH 6–8.
Key features
Flower: Flowers are large and predominantly
sky blue.
Biology
Common field-speedwell is frequently found on arable
land, both on fallow ground and beneath the crop
canopy. It is found on autumn- and spring-sown
crops probably encouraged by an increase in winter
cropping. Plants can overwinter and even flower
throughout the year, giving rise to two generations per
season; the large seeds are probably dispersed by
ants. Shoot fragments are able to regenerate.
Management
Residual herbicides are generally quite effective in
autumn- and spring-sown crops; sulfonylureas and
contact herbicides are effective in cereals.
39
Common fumitory
Fumaria officinalis
Competitive in
Location
Geographic location
Common fumitory is a lowland Not present
plant, growing up to an altitude
of 300m. It appears in winter Unlikely
and Spring crops and may be More likely
increasing in fields of winter
cereals in the north of England Very likely
and in Scotland where there is
poor control by residual
herbicides.
Soil type
It prefers nutrient-rich chalky
loams with good water
availability and is an indicator
of good soil conditions.
Key features
Plant: The sap is colourless.
Flower: The sepal is less than half the flower
length. There are often more than 20 flowers on
a flowering spike.
Fruit: It is shaped like a flattened globe.
Biology
Common fumitory is widespread on arable land. It
mainly germinates in spring and can set seed in one
year. It can be self-fertile or can cross-fertilise.
Management
Control of established plants is difficult with
herbicides. Seedlings can be controlled with
mecoprop-P and HBN herbicides in cereals.
41
Common hemp-nettle
Galeopsis tetrahit
Competitive in
Location
Geographic location
Common hemp-nettle occurs in Not present
disturbed ground with high levels
of bare soil, often in broad-leaved Unlikely
crops, or in moist sites near river More likely
banks and hedgerows, up to an
altitude of 400m. It commonly Very likely
occurs in spring cereals in
northern England and Scotland.
Soil type
It can grow on a wide range of
soils pH 4.5–7, and may be more
common in soils of relatively high
organic matter or in areas where
soils remain moist in the summer.
Key features
Plant: There is a distinct swelling where the leaf stalk
meets the stem. Plants can have a bristly appearance.
Biology
Common hemp-nettle forms more robust plants in
broad-leaved crops and fallow ground than in cereal
crops. The plants reproduce by seed, which is
produced in smaller quantities than in similar plants
and may still be on the plant during harvest, so
contaminating crop grain. Seeds germinate only
after overwintering.
Management
It is controlled by a range of broad-leaved
weed herbicides.
43
Common mouse-ear
Cerastium fontanum
Competitive in
Location
Geographic location
Common mouse-ear grows to Not present
altitudes of above 1,000m in all
areas of Britain, in fertile Unlikely
habitats including meadows, More likely
pastures, cultivated ground,
dunes and shingle. Very likely
Soil type
It likes acidic, wetter soils,
rich in nutrients.
Key features
Young plant: The seedlings are very small and hairy.
Biology
Common mouse-ear is a perennial, which functions
as an annual in arable fields. The seeds are dispersed
by wind or eaten by birds. It can emerge throughout
the year, given sufficient soil moisture.
Management
It is less common where soils are routinely cultivated
and is likely to be encouraged by reduced cultivation
and direct drilling. It does not compete in dense,
vigorous crops.
45
Common nettle
Urtica dioica
Competitive in
S O N D J F M A M J J A
Location
Geographic location
Common nettle is found in a wide Not present
variety of habitats including
cultivated and waste ground, Unlikely
scrub, unmanaged grassland, and More likely
fen and river banks, up to an
altitude of 850m. Very likely
Soil type
It prefers nutrient-rich soils.
46
Description
Scale: 1 space = 1mm
Key features
Young plant: It has longer and more triangular first
true leaves than annual nettle.
Plant: It is tall and upright, with leaves larger than
those of small nettle. The leaves and stem are
covered in stinging hairs.
Lookalikes
Common nettle may be confused with small nettle,
however it has shorter cotyledons than small nettle
and the first true leaves of common nettle are longer
and more triangular.
Biology
Common nettle is frequently found in waste places
and field margins, though it does encroach onto
arable land. It is a particular problem in perennial
crops and grassland. Some young shoots of nettle
can overwinter, but the plant mostly dies back,
growing strongly in spring. The plants reproduce
when stolons are fragmented or from seed ingested
by animals.
Management
It will be reduced by continuous cutting. For
control, use glyphosate in fallow or selective
treatments in grassland.
47
Common orache
Atriplex patula
Competitive in
S O N D J F M A M J J A
Location
Geographic location
Common orache is mainly a Not present
lowland weed but can grow up to
an altitude of 400m. It is found on Unlikely
arable land, on manure heaps, More likely
demolition sites, and areas with a
large amount of bare soil. Very likely
Soil type
It prefers moist soils with pH > 5.
Key features
Plant: The young leaves are mealy. The shoots of
the growing plants have upright triangular leaves
at the top.
Lookalikes
Common orache may be confused with fat-hen:
fat-hen and Good King Henry also have mealy leaves.
Orache has broader cotyledon stalks with leaf and
cotyledon having a bright-green underside, whilst
young fat-hen plants may be bright purple on the
underside of the cotyledons.
Biology
Common orache is particularly common in
broad-leaved crops or fallow areas. Plants regenerate
only by seed, which can be an impurity in crop seed,
and may be spread by birds or small mammals.
The plants do not overwinter. Early sown winter crops
are usually too competitive to be affected by this
spring-germinating species but the deep tap root
can interfere with harvesting of beet crops.
Management
Minimum tillage may reduce emergence. It can
be controlled by a range of herbicides at the
seedling stage.
49
Common poppy
Papaver rhoeas
Competitive in
Location
Geographic location
Poppy is widely distributed in all Not present
areas of the British Isles, but is less
abundant in northern Scotland. It Unlikely
tends to prefer lowland areas. More likely
Soil type Very likely
Poppy prefers soils with reasonable
moisture and will spread in areas
with bare soil.
Key features
Fruit: The seed head is short and smooth.
Lookalikes
Common poppy may be confused with young plants
of shepherd’s-purse but the cotyledons of common
poppy are narrower. The hairs of the common poppy
stand singly and may be forked, while those of
shepherd’s-purse form little star-like clusters.
Biology
Common poppy occurs particularly in winter cereals
and oilseed rape where it is competitive, but is also
found in spring crops, fallows and more rarely
vegetables and clover crops. Autumn-germinating
seedlings can overwinter. Plants flower in midsummer,
but there may be a second flush of flowers once the
wheat crop has been harvested. The plant reproduces
entirely by seed. The very long seed persistence
means that poppy appears in newly cultivated land.
Management
The best control method is to stimulate germination
through cultivation before spraying with glyphosate.
Common poppy is controlled by a wide range of
herbicides in cereals and legumes, but control is more
difficult in brassica crops.
Sulfonylurea resistance has been confirmed in the UK.
51
Common vetch
Vicia sativa
Competitive in
S O N D J F M A M J J A
Location
Geographic location
Although it is widely found in Not present
lowland areas in most of the British
Isles, in Ireland it is mainly confined Unlikely
to the east coast. More likely
Soil type Very likely
It prefers dry and sandy soils.
52
Description
Scale: 1 space = 1mm
Key features
Young plant: The first true leaves are long and narrow
with no leaflets.
Biology
Common vetch was once grown as a cultivated plant.
It is found in grassy field margins, but may also be
seen in arable crops, sometimes as cultivated forms
where vetches form part of the cropping rotation.
Common vetch usually germinates in autumn and
overwinters; more rarely it is a summer annual.
Undisturbed plants may be biennial. It is often seen in
spring-sown crops where it can interfere with
harvesting and seed can contaminate grain.
Management
Seedlings can be harrowed out, but once
established it is not readily controlled except with
hoeing. Vetches are generally susceptible to
sulfonylureas and some hormone herbicides such as
mecoprop-P and dicamba.
53
Corn spurrey
Spergula arvensis
Competitive in
Location
Geographic location
Corn spurrey occurs in cereal fields Not present
or other cultivated land up to an
altitude of 450m. Unlikely
Key features
Young plant: The cotyledons and first true leaves are
similar, both needle-shaped
Plant: The leaves are needle-shaped and arranged
in whorls.
Biology
Corn spurrey can be a troublesome weed of cereals,
because of its dense mats of growth. Two generations
can occur in one season because plants can set
many seeds within 10 weeks of germinating and just a
fortnight after flowering. There is a persistent
seedbank. Seeds can be transported by birds or
mammals, or agricultural machinery.
Management
Raising the pH over time will reduce corn spurrey and
encourage the competitiveness of the crop.
55
Cornflower
Centaurea cyanus
Competitive in
Location
Geographic location
Although cornflower has become Not present
rare as a wild plant, it may be found
in waste places, roadsides and Unlikely
rubbish tips, often as a garden More likely
escapee. It is occasionally found
in the north-east of England and Very likely
Scotland.
Soil type
It grows best in sandy loams and
chalky clays.
Key features
Plant: The long thin leaves are covered with
woolly hairs.
Flowers: The flowers are bright blue.
Biology
Cornflower can emerge in autumn- and spring-sown
crops and can compete quite well with cereals; in the
past it was capable of reducing yields and interfering
with harvesting. Autumn-germinating plants
overwinter and produce more seeds than spring-
germinating plants.
Management
Use a stale seedbed approach before sowing crops.
Harrows will control seedlings but hoeing is required
for larger plants. Cornflower is susceptible to the main
spring-applied herbicides.
57
Cow parsley
Anthriscus sylvestris
Competitive in
Location
Geographic location
Cow parsley grows throughout Not present
Britain in hedgerows, verges,
meadows and river banks. Unlikely
Key features
Plant: It has hollow furrowed unspotted stems,
sometimes purplish in colour, and triangular grooved
leaf stems.
Flowers: Cow parsley is the first umbellifer to flower.
Lookalikes
Cow parsley may be confused with shepard's-needle
or other similar umbellifers when young: The leaflets
are coarser and less divided than shepard's-needle,
and the cotyledons longer and thinner than
fool’s parsley.
Biology
Cow parsley spreads into crop headlands from
hedgerows. It is usually found as a seedling in cereal
crops. The seeds require chilling to germinate and the
seedlings grow slowly. Mature plants can overwinter
forming new leaves in the spring; these die off as the
flowering stem grows. The plant can also regenerate
from the buds in the axils of the basal leaves.
Management
Spread may be reduced by ploughing and probably
moderate cultivation. It can be partly controlled with
cereal herbicides.
59
Creeping bent
Agrostis stolonifera
Competitive in
S O N D J F M A M J J A
Location
Geographic location
Creeping bent grows throughout Not present
the British Isles up to an altitude of
950m. It tolerates a wide range of Unlikely
habitats from salt marshes to sand More likely
dunes and grassland to arable.
Very likely
Soil type
It is found on all soil types, from
wet to dry, heavy or light soils.
60
Description
Scale: 1 space = 1mm
Key features
Plant: Leaves are green or greyish-green and hairless;
sheaths are rounded and smooth.
Flowers: The flowerheads are upright, cylindrical and
usually open.
Lookalikes
Creeping bent may be confused with black bent:
creeping bent has a narrower, tighter flowerhead, and
spreads by stolons not rhizomes, forming a loose tuft.
Biology
Creeping bent can be a weed of headlands, but
seldom goes far into arable fields. The plants can
overwinter. In arable fields propagation by detached
shoots is an important means of spread.
Management
Spring cropping can reduce the vigour. Reasonable
control of creeping bent stolons can be achieved with
glyphosate, most effectively in uncropped land or
summer fallows, but pre-harvest in early-harvested
crops. Some residual herbicides may affect seedlings.
Early cultivations can stimulate shed seed to germinate,
so stale seedbeds may be used to control the young
germinating plants, which can be killed by
subsequent cultivation.
61
Creeping thistle
Cirsium arvense
Competitive in
Location
Geographic location
Creeping thistle is found almost Not present
everywhere in Britain, on cultivated
land or overgrazed pastures. Unlikely
Key features
Plant: In the field plants group close together. The
stems are unwinged and shiny and the flower stalks
have many small flowerheads.
Lookalikes
Creeping thistle may be confused with spear thistle; the
young plants of thistles are often difficult to tell apart.
Creeping thistle is less likely to set fertile seed than other
thistles. There are few marginal spines on creeping thistle.
The large second leaf of spear thistle is densely hairy.
Biology
Creeping thistle is one of the most troublesome weeds
of arable land. Dense patches can interfere with cereal
harvest and can be even more of a problem in potatoes
and sugar beet. The plant dies back in winter while
seeds are still retained in the seed head. The separate
sexes need to be within a few hundred metres for seeds
to be fertile, although some plants may be self-fertile.
Only about 3% of the seed is viable. Plants regenerate
aggressively from the extensive system of branched,
lateral roots, each of which may give rise to new shoots,
resulting in the formation of large clonal patches which
can expand at the rate of 6m per year.
Management
Creeping thistle is difficult to eradicate because of the
extensive root system and because the waxy coating on
the leaves reduces herbicide adhesion. It can be
controlled by combinations of herbicides, ploughing and
crop rotations, but avoid chisel ploughing or cultivations
which break up rhizomes as they readily regenerate.
It is possible to drag the rhizomes to the surface for
desiccation in fallows.
63
Crested dog’s-tail
Cynosurus cristatus
Competitive in
S O N D J F M A M J J A
Location
Geographic location
Crested dog’s-tail is generally Not present
a plant of lowland areas and
its distribution is widespread Unlikely
throughout the British Isles. It is More likely
usually associated with pasture,
meadow, or short swards but can Very likely
be found in fallow.
Soil type
It likes neutral to alkaline-rich
well-drained soils of low- to
mid-fertility.
Biology
Crested dog’s-tail was formerly sown as a pasture
plant. It remains green all winter, but in the summer
the leaves die off.
Management
It does not persist in regularly cultivated soils and can
be controlled with hoeing and harrowing.
65
Curled dock
Rumex crispus
Competitive in
Location
Geographic location
Curled dock is found on verges, Not present
wasteland and arable land up to an
altitude of 850m. Unlikely
Key features
Young plant: The cotyledons are more slender than
those of broad-leaved dock.
Plant: The leaves are 4–8 times longer than broad,
with wavy margins.
Biology
Curled dock is often abundant on arable land with
heavy, damp soils. It is found more frequently in
spring than winter crops and can be difficult to control
in crops other than cereals. Curled dock can
overwinter as a rosette of small leaves; it is the size of
this rosette which determines if the plant will flower
the following year. Sometimes two crops of seeds
may be produced a season. Reproduction is mainly
by seed but the plant may produce vegetatively from
root fragments.
Management
In row crops, routine hoeing or pulling may be
required. Control established plants in uncropped
land or in grass breaks with suitable herbicides.
67
Cut-leaved crane’s-bill
Geranium dissectum
Competitive in
Location
Geographic location
Cut-leaved crane’s-bill grows in Not present
disturbed warm soils up to an
altitude of 350m. Unlikely
Key features
Plant: The deeply divided leaves have seven lobes
and a rounded outline. Stem and leaf hairs frequently
end in glands (a hand lens is required).
Biology
Cut-leaved crane’s-bill is fairly common in cereal
crops, particularly on lighter soils and fallows.
Reproduction is by seed and 80–90% of the seeds
germinate. Autumn-germinating plants can overwinter.
Management
Herbicide control is variable with residual herbicides.
Sulfonylureas have useful activity.
69
Daisy
Bellis perennis
Competitive in
Location
Geographic location
Daisy is widespread throughout the Not present
British Isles, up to an altitude of
915m, growing best in mown, Unlikely
grazed or trampled grassland, More likely
with low or moderate amounts of
bare ground. Very likely
Soil type
It prefers neutral or chalky soils
with pH>5.5, especially those
which are reasonably wet for
a period.
Key features
Young plant: The leaves have bristly hairs.
Lookalikes
Young daisy plants may be confused with Canadian
fleabane: daisy is larger, slightly bluer and has more-
rounded cotyledons.
Biology
Daisy is a potentially perennial, broad-leaved
grassland species that may be found in compacted
moist soils in arable crops, particularly in field margins.
A serious problem in turf grasses, it is seldom weedy
in other crops and has some biodiversity value. Plants
overwinter with green leaves showing and may even
continue growing. Reproduction is mainly vegetative
from stolons, although the seeds can germinate over
a wide temperature range. The flowers develop very
fast in spring and summer. Seeds may be dispersed
on feet and vehicles.
Management
Daisy does not persist with routine cultivation or
hoeing, and is susceptible to cereal and some
grassland herbicides.
71
Dandelion
Taraxacum agg.
Competitive in
Location
Geographic location
Dandelion has many micro-species Not present
that are difficult to tell apart.
Unlikely
The whole group is found
throughout the British Isles up to an More likely
altitude of 1,220m, preferring fertile, Very likely
disturbed and artificial habitats.
Soil type
Dandelions are found everywhere.
They are most frequent where soils
have pH >7.0
Key features
Plant: Stems all have a milky sap.
Biology
Dandelion can be found in low-growing grassland,
where there is limited disturbance. Plants can
overwinter as a small rosette. New leaves are
produced above those of the previous season.
Reproduction is by seed or by fragmentation of
the long tap root. The plant is self-fertile, pollinated by
insects and the fruit is wind-dispersed.
Management
Although found in arable crops, it is rarely a
nuisance as it does not tolerate cultivation or many
cereal herbicides.
73
Dove’s-foot crane’s-bill
Geranium molle
Competitive in
Location
Geographic location
Dove’s-foot crane’s-bill occurs in a
wide range of habitats, up to an Not present
altitude of 550m. It prefers some Unlikely
bare ground and is not frequent in
arable crops. More likely
Very likely
Soil type
It is found on moderately dry, loose
sandy soils, rich in humus and
nutrients with pH >5.
74
Description Scale: 1 space = 1mm
Key features
Plant: It is distinguished from other geraniums by
the almost round leaves. The stems are covered by
both long and short hairs, so look softly hairy.
Flower: The pink petals have broad, blunt notches
at the tip.
Biology
Dove’s-foot crane’s-bill is found on lightly grassed
margins and in arable crops, particularly in headland
areas. Reproduction is by seed. It is most often seen
in spring crops, but it can germinate in the autumn
and overwinter and grow vigorously in more open
winter crops.
Management
In more open winter crops, control can be
variable with residual herbicides. Sulfonylureas
have some activity.
75
Fat hen
Chenopodium album
Competitive in
Seeds/plant: 3,000–20,000
Location
Geographic location
This is mainly a lowland weed,
distributed widely in England and Not present
Wales and the arable areas of Unlikely
Scotland. It prefers arable or other
cultivated ground. More likely
Very likely
Soil type
Can be found in most soil types,
but prefers moist, high-nitrogen,
humus-rich loams and sandy soil.
76
Description Scale: 1 space = 1mm
Key features
Plant: The plant is often narrow without spreading
branches and the leaves are mealy.
Lookalikes
Fat hen may be confused with common orache: fat
hen has broader cotyledons and the undersides are
often bright purple, unlike those of orache, which are
bright green.
Biology
Fat hen is one of the most important and
widespread of all weeds. Primarily it is a spring weed
of broad-leaved crops such as potatoes, sugar beet
and open row crops. Seeds may germinate in
autumn but only spring-germinating seedlings go on
to flower and set seed. Seeds are spread by crop
contamination and dispersed by birds and
mammals; about 20% germinate immediately. Fat
hen extracts large quantities of nutrients from the
soil. It has a highly persistent seedbank and seeds
can remain dormant in the soil for many years.
Management
It is vital to prevent seed shed from fat hen to control
population increase. There are a number of broad-
spectrum herbicides that give good control.
77
Field bean
Vicia faba
Competitive in
Flowering
Germination
S O N D J F M A M J J A
Location
Geographic location
Field bean is found in lowland areas
in the midlands and south of Not present
England and southern Scotland, as Unlikely
a volunteer in arable fields, as a
result of previous cropping. More likely
Very likely
Soil type
It can grow on any soil type but
prefers cultivated rich loams.
Key features
Young plant: It is very sturdy with no visible
cotyledons.
Biology
Field bean is found as a volunteer in arable fields as
a result of previous cropping. It does not persist for
long in the seedbank if controlled in the crop. Field
bean may germinate in autumn and overwinter. It
grows best in moist cool conditions.
Management
Delaying cultivation allows predation of seeds on the
soil surface. Field bean is easily controlled by
hormonal herbicides and sulfonylureas in cereals.
79
Field bindweed
Convolvulus arvensis
Competitive in
Location
Geographic location
Field bindweed is found in a wide
variety of lowland habitats including Not present
verges, waste tips, and disturbed Unlikely
and arable ground.
More likely
Soil type
Very likely
It likes dry, warm, nutrient-rich deep
and loose loams.
Key features
Plant: The heart-shaped leaves are rounded at the
tip and the plant twines to the left, anti-clockwise.
Lookalikes
Field bindweed may be confused with black-bindweed
as young plants.
The difference is in the cotyledons; black-bindweed
has long cotyledons with short stalks, while field
bindweed has oval cotyledons, notched at the tip.
Biology
Field bindweed is a persistent and troublesome
perennial weed. It can be found both on disturbed
arable land and on undisturbed sites such as
field margins.
Field bindweed plants die back in autumn. The roots
overwinter although they can be susceptible to
freezing. The plants can regenerate from fragments
of horizontal roots and, though seed set is unlikely in
Britain, the long-lived seeds rapidly germinate.
Seeds may be dispersed by birds. It can severely
reduce crop yield and also cause difficulties with
harvesting. Field bindweed does not persist in long
grass leys or in grazed or mown land.
Management
The leaves and stems are difficult to wet with
herbicides, but spring herbicides for broadleaved
weeds in cereals are effective. It can be controlled in
fallow with glyphosate.
81
Field forget-me-not
Myosotis arvensis
Competitive in
Location
Geographic location
Forget-me-not is usually found on
arable land or other habitats with Not present
bare soils. It can grow above an Unlikely
altitude of 600m.
More likely
Soil type
Very likely
There is no particular soil type
associated with this weed.
Biology
Field forget-me-not is common in winter cereals and
winter oilseed rape and can also occur in spring
crops. It is generally not very competitive but can
occur in very high numbers competing with the
young crop.
The mature plant can overwinter as a small rosette
and seedlings which germinate in autumn can also
survive winter. The plant reproduces by seed.
Seeds can be moved by ingestion by animals. Plants
may re-sprout and flower when the leaves have
been removed.
Management
It is controlled by a range of residual herbicides and
some foliar treatments, but not hormonal herbicides.
83
Field horsetail
Equisetum arvense
Competitive in
S O N D J F M A M J J A
Location
Geographic location
Field horsetail is widespread around
Britain in many habitats including Not present
roadsides, paths, gardens and waste Unlikely
ground up to an altitude of 1,000m.
More likely
Soil type
Very likely
It can tolerate a wide range of soil
moisture and types.
Key features
Plant: The plants have wiry stems which feel gritty
when rubbed due to the high silica content. Leaves
are like bristles. The rhizomes are black.
Biology
Horsetail can be a problem in perennial crops, where
it is not readily controlled. The wiry stems interfere
with harvesting arable crops. It reproduces mainly
from rhizome fragments and also from the short-lived
spores. Plants overwinter as rhizomes, producing
fertile shoots in April and sterile shoots later.
Management
It is difficult to control with herbicides, but does not
readily persist with routine cultivation.
85
Field pansy
Viola arvensis
Competitive in
Seeds/flower: 44–75 S O N D J F M A M J J A
Seeds/plant: 2,500
Location
Geographic location
Field pansy is a weed of cultivated
land or other open lowland habitats. Not present
Key features
Plant: Field pansy has a less robust appearance
than wild pansy.
Flowers: It is distinguished from wild pansy by its
paler smaller flowers. The petals are shorter than
the sepals.
Biology
Field pansy is very widespread in cereal crops. It
may be more common in winter crops but has
increased in spring crops, possibly encouraged by
winter cropping. Autumn-germinating field pansy
can overwinter and these plants will flower early the
following year. The seed is dispersed from an
explosive seed head. The plant stems can interfere
with combine cutter bar operation.
Management
Residual herbicide treatments are generally effective
in autumn- and spring-sown crops.
87
Fool’s parsley
Aethusa cynapium
Competitive in
Location
Geographic location
Distributed towards the south of
Britain, fool’s parsley is found on Not present
cultivated lands, in undergrowth and Unlikely
water meadows.
More likely
Soil type
Very likely
It is usually found on nutrient-rich
soils, which may be chalky or neutral
to alkaline loams.
Key features
Flowers: Fool’s parsley has downward-pointing
projections (bracteoles) under each flower.
Lookalikes
Fool’s parsley can be mistaken for wild carrot at the
seedling stage. The cotyledons of fool’s parsley are
wider and shorter and the first true leaves less finely
divided than those of wild carrot.
Biology
The plants germinate in spring and die back
after flowering.
Management
Fool’s parsley can be controlled in arable land by
grass breaks of 2–3 years and reduced by growing
shading break crops. Seedlings can be successfully
harrowed when small. It is not controlled by
hormone herbicides. Treat when young with
sulfonylureas or contact herbicides in cereals.
89
Garlic mustard
Alliaria petiolata
Competitive in
S O N D J F M A M J J A
Location
Geographic location
Generally a lowland plant, garlic
mustard inhabits a wide range Not present
of habitats, including Unlikely
hedgerows, waste ground,
farmyards and gardens. More likely
Very likely
Soil type
It prefers fertile moist soils but can
grow on all but the most acidic.
Key features
Plant: The leaves smell of garlic when crushed.
Biology
Garlic mustard grows in field margins and
hedgerows and does not tolerate cultivation or crop
competition in arable fields. It overwinters as a
rosette of small leaves. The seeds may remain
dormant for 18 months or longer.
Management
Care should be taken to reduce seed returning to
the seedbank.
91
Great brome
Anisantha diandra
Competitive in
Germination
S O N D J F M A M J J A
Location
Geographic location
Great brome grows generally in the
south and east of England, but has Not present
spread as far north as southern Unlikely
Scotland. It is found in arable fields,
waste ground and roadsides. More likely
Very likely
Soil type
It prefers sandy soils and dunes.
Key features
Great brome looks like a larger form of barren brome.
Biology
Great brome emerges in the autumn and has a
relatively short-lived seed.
Management
Moving to spring cropping reduces the infestation.
Mouldboard ploughing to 15cm immediately after
harvest assists control.
93
Green field-speedwell
Veronica agrestis
Competitive in
Seeds/plant: 1,000–10,000 S O N D J F M A M J J A
Location
Geographic location
Green field-speedwell prefers
cultivated land, gardens or Not present
allotments, usually below an altitude Unlikely
of 400m.
More likely
Soil type
Very likely
It prefers well-drained acidic soils,
but may be present on chalky soils
where there is surface leaching.
Key features
Fruit: The two-lobed fruit is longer than it is wide,
and is covered in many glandular hairs.
Biology
Green field-speedwell is found in spring cereals and
vegetable crops but is not a very competitive weed
in vigorous cereal crops. It germinates mainly in
spring although some seeds may germinate in
autumn. It needs relatively high temperatures for
germination so it germinates later than other species.
Management
In row crops it can be controlled by harrowing
or hoeing if herbicides are not available. It does
not persist in grass leys. Wide range of
herbicide options, although need to consider
resistance implications.
95
Groundsel
Senecio vulgaris
Competitive in
Location
Geographic location
Groundsel grows up to an altitude of
500m, in open habitats such as Not present
arable soils, waste places and Unlikely
rubbish tips.
More likely
Soil type
Very likely
It grows best in loose sandy loams,
or nutrient-rich sandy soils with a pH
usually >6.
Key features
Flower: The sepal-like bracts outside the
flowerheads have black tips.
Biology
Groundsel is common in arable fields. With a short
lifespan it is able to produce several generations in
one year. Although increasingly found in autumn and
spring arable crops because of its abundance in
fallows, it is seldom a major problem. Groundsel
may increase in stubble-sown crops, as it
successfully colonises firm seedbeds.
Seeds germinate throughout the whole year and in a
good year plants shed seeds by early June which
can give rise to more than one generation a year.
Plants are able to overwinter. The seeds can be
dispersed by wind, but the wetted fruits become
sticky and can be carried by animals or humans.
Management
Groundsel is controlled by some residual herbicides
but can reappear in open crops in spring, where it is
susceptible to a wide range of foliar herbicides. It is
a nuisance in perennial crops where herbicides
choices are limited.
97
Hedge mustard
Sisymbrium officinale
Competitive in
Location
Geographic location
Hedge mustard occurs in cultivated
ground, hedgerows and waste Not present
ground, including field margins, in Unlikely
lowland areas up to an altitude of
350m. More likely
Very likely
Soil type
It likes dry, loose, nutrient-rich loams
and sandy and stony soils.
98
Description Scale: 1 space = 1mm
Key features
Plant: It is a much-branched mustard-type plant.
The branches are usually parallel to the ground.
Biology
Hedge mustard appears in spring-sown crops and
poorly competitive winter cereals.
The flowers are pollinated by insects. Hedge
mustard reproduces only by seed, which is
wind-dispersed.
Management
A stale seed-bed approach may be used to control
this species.
99
Hemlock
Conium maculatum
Competitive in
Flowering
Germination
S O N D J F M A M J J A
Location
Geographic location
Hemlock is generally a lowland plant
and usually prefers damper soils on Not present
waste tips and roadsides, and in Unlikely
perennial crops.
More likely
Soil type
Very likely
It prefers damper, nutrient-rich soils.
100
Description Scale: 1 space = 1mm
Key features
Plant: It has purple-spotted, hairless stems
and an unpleasant mouse-like smell. It is
extremely poisonous.
Biology
Hemlock is most often a weed of perennial crops,
as it does not persist in regularly cultivated fields.
It germinates in autumn and overwinters as a
rosette of divided leaves. The plants can live for
one or two years.
Management
Control the plant in arable crops to prevent
persistence into grass leys. The weed is very toxic to
livestock. Plants should be controlled with
glyphosate and all livestock should be excluded until
the weed has died back completely.
101
Henbit dead-nettle
Lamium amplexicaule
Competitive in
S O N D J F M A M J J A
Location
Geographic location
Henbit dead-nettle is common on
arable and fallow land to the south Not present
east of Britain. It grows up to an Unlikely
altitude of 450m.
More likely
Soil type
Very likely
It prefers light dry humus and sandy
loam soils which are nutrient rich.
Key features
Young plant: The first true leaves are rounded.
Plant: The leaves are rounded with wavy edges and
the upper leaves appear to circle the stem.
Lookalikes
Henbit dead-nettle may be confused with red
dead-nettle; the dead-nettles can be difficult to
distinguish at the seedling and young plant stages.
The first true leaves of henbit dead-nettle are paler
than the other dead-nettles.
Biology
Henbit dead-nettle is common on arable land, where
it is most often found in winter crops. Plants are
self-fertile and in dull weather can fertilise
themselves while in the bud. The seeds germinate in
spring and summer and small plants can overwinter.
Management
It may be controlled by spring cropping and by a
range of herbicides suitable for broad-leaved weeds.
103
Italian rye-grass
Lolium multiflorum
Competitive in
S O N D J F M A M J J A
Location
Geographic location
Italian rye-grass is mainly found in
the south of Britain, on verges and Not present
field borders, mainly in lowland Unlikely
areas at altitudes below 400m.
More likely
Soil type
Very likely
It prefers well-drained soils of a
moderate pH and high nitrogen
Key features
Plant: It is distinguished from perennial rye-grass
by the leaves which are rolled in the shoot and the
large auricles.
Flowers: The lower bract is awned. Flowerheads are
arranged at 90 degrees to the flower stem.
Biology
Italian rye-grass is an economically important
forage grass increasing as a weed problem in
many areas of the UK. It can grow from seed or
vegetatively from badly ploughed-in tufts or rooting
stems. Autumn-germinating plants can overwinter.
It can become a severe weed in arable crops where
pasture forms part of the rotation.
Management
Use glyphosate in fallows, as a pre-harvest
treatment and in break crops. Reducing seed spread
by cleaning equipment between fields and avoiding
using fields with heavy rye-grass populations will
greatly decrease rye-grass problems.
105
Ivy-leaved speedwell
Veronica hederifolia
Competitive in
Location
Geographic location
Ivy-leaved speedwell is a lowland
plant, growing up to an altitude of Not present
380m. It prefers open arable land, Unlikely
gardens and other bare or disturbed
soils. It grows particularly in winter More likely
cereals, but is increasingly found in Very likely
spring cereals in the west and north,
as populations have been
encouraged by winter cropping.
Soil type
It is found on warm, loose,
nutrient-rich mild loam soils.
Key features
Young plant: The cotyledons end in a knob.
Fruit: The fruit has no lobes and is hairy.
Biology
Ivy-leaved speedwell reproduces by seed,
which germinates in cold conditions in late
autumn or early spring.
Management
Autumn residual herbicides are effective but
late-germinating seedlings can escape. Spring foliar
treatments based on sulfonylureas plus contact
herbicides are effective in cereals.
107
Knapweed
Centaurea nigra
Competitive in
Location
Geographic location
Knapweed grows at altitudes of up
to 600m in waste ground, field Not present
margins and roadsides, meadows Unlikely
and pastures.
More likely
Soil type
Very likely
It can tolerate a wide range of soils,
but prefers unmanured sites.
Key features
Young plant: The first true leaves have a
dark colour.
Biology
Knapweed is more common in older pastures and is
usually found on the margins of arable land.
Although the plant dies back overwinter it is a
perennial. Plants mainly reproduce by seed, which
may survive for several years, if they survive
predation by insects or small mammals. Plants may
reproduce vegetatively if side shoots become
detached from the parent plant.
Management
It does not persist in cultivated soils and is readily
controlled with glyphosate in uncropped breaks.
109
Knot-grass
Polygonum aviculare
Competitive in
Location
Geographic location
Knot-grass is found up to an altitude
of 550m in all areas of Britain. It is Not present
common on arable and other Unlikely
disturbed or trampled land,
demolition sites, soil heaps, manure More likely
and waste heaps, paths and tracks Very likely
but not woodland or very wet
habitats.
Soil type
It is most frequently found on
bare fertile soils, but not
waterlogged sites.
110
Description Scale: 1 space = 1mm
Key features
Young plant: The hypocotyl is long and crimson.
Plant: The stems do not end in a flowerhead, as the
tiny pink flowers occur in the leaf axils.
Biology
Knot-grass tends to be a worse weed in open and
spring-sown crops, e.g. spring beans, sugar beet,
kale, linseed and potatoes, than in winter cereals,
beans and even wheat crops.
It reproduces from seeds, which can form a
persistent seedbank. The seeds are relatively large;
they may be dispersed in mud on footwear and on
tyre treads and can survive ingestion by stock and
by birds. They germinate largely in spring and are
returned to a state of secondary dormancy when
late spring temperatures rise, so produce only one
generation a year. Autumn-germinating seeds do not
survive the winter. The vegetative part of the plant
can regenerate if cut off during the growing season.
Management
Dormancy is broken by winter chilling so spring
cultivation can increase plant numbers. Shallow
burial promotes emergence compared with deep
ploughing but ploughing will increase the
persistence of seedbanks. In cereals, combinations
of hormone, sulfonylurea and contact herbicides are
often needed for good control. Control can be
variable in spring brassica crops, beet, potatoes and
legumes if soil conditions are dry and residual
herbicides do not work well.
111
Linseed
Linum usitatissimum
Competitive in
Germination
S O N D J F M A M J J A
Location
Geographic location
Linseed is found in southern Britain
as a volunteer from previous crops Not present
or the result of scattered bird seed Unlikely
on banks and verges.
More likely
Soil type
Very likely
It can grow on a wide range of
soil types.
Key features
Young plant: The three-veined leaves are well
spaced and needle-shaped.
Flowers: All the sepals are pointed and the petals
fall off early in the afternoon.
Biology
Linseed and flax are different cultivars of Linum
usitatissimum. The tall form, flax, is rarely grown for
linen fibre. The short form linseed is the usual crop
grown to produce linseed oil. Both can occur as
crop volunteers, generally in the season following
the crop. Autumn-germinating plants may be killed
by winter frosts.
Management
Control can be helped by a stale seedbed after the
crop is harvested to encourage predation and
germination of seeds. Linseed is surprisingly tolerant
of a wide range of herbicides but may be controlled
with some hormone herbicides.
113
Long-headed poppy
Papaver dubium
Competitive in
Location
Geographic location
Long-headed poppy is a lowland
plant found in arable fields, Not present
wastelands and gardens. It is now Unlikely
largely restricted to the chalk of
southern England, though it does More likely
occur on outlying sites in Norfolk, Very likely
Northamptonshire and Cornwall.
Soil type
It is found on light or heavy
chalky soils.
Key features
Fruit: The seedhead is long and smooth.
Biology
Long-headed poppy occurs as a cereal weed,
though it is less frequent on arable land than
common poppy. The plants reproduce entirely by
seed; autumn-germinating plants can overwinter.
The small green seed heads can block combine
sieves at harvest and the seeds can contaminate
oilseed rape seed samples.
Management
It is readily controlled in cereal crops and uncropped
land with herbicides.
115
Loose silky bent
Apera spica-venti
Competitive in
S O N D J F M A M J J A
Location
Geographic location
Loose silky bent is not widely
distributed but found in arable fields, Not present
sandy tracks and roadsides up to an Unlikely
altitude of 650m.
More likely
Soil type
Very likely
It grows in bare ground on light soils
such as sand and light loam.
Key features
Plant: The plant does not spread by rhizomes
or stolons.
Flowers: The flowerhead has more-open spreading
branches than other bents.
Lookalikes
Loose silky bent may be confused with black-grass
at the young plant stage of development because of
the reddish/purple colouring of the leaf sheath.
When mature, loose silky bent has more-limited
tillering than black-grass, does not produce
rhizomes or stolons unlike other bents, and tends to
be more upright in later habit.
Biology
Loose silky bent is occasionally very abundant in
cereal fields. It seeds profusely with light seeds which
can travel long distances. Seeds usually germinate in
autumn and overwinter as young plants. Because
seeds have a relatively long survival, germination can
be delayed until the conditions are favourable. The
seeds can shed and germinate before a crop
matures, making control difficult.
Management
Grass breaks or spring cropping can reduce
populations. In reduced tillage situations, allow
seedlings to germinate and then cultivate or harrow
seedlings when the soil is dry. Wide range of
herbicide options. Some resistance to ureas and
amides and ALS inhibitors has been found in
mainland Europe.
117
Meadow brome
Bromus commutatus
Competitive in
Flowering
Germination
S O N D J F M A M J J A
Location
Geographic location
Meadow brome is a lowland plant of
southern England, growing Not present
especially on cultivated land and in Unlikely
rough grassland, damp meadows,
verges and track edges. More likely
Very likely
Soil type
It is most frequently found on moist,
relatively heavy soils.
Key features
Plant: The stems are hairy.
Flowers: The ripe flowerheads droop to one side.
Biology
Meadow brome most commonly infests
headlands of winter cereal crops and is rarely
seen in spring-sown crops. It completes its life
cycle within one year and does not reproduce from
vegetative fragments.
Management
Shed seed should be kept on the surface for 4
weeks before cultivation to allow ripening. Plants
should be killed with a glyphosate application
before sowing subsequent crops. Deep cultivations
or mouldboard ploughing, to bury seeds below
20cm, will reduce numbers in following years.
Spring cropping is effective for control, as is fallow
land, as long as emerging plants are controlled
before setting seed. Mow, or spray with glyphosate,
before flowering.
Moderate control can be achieved by a variety of
herbicides in cereals. Greater control may be
achieved in broad-leaved crops.
119
Nipplewort
Lapsana communis
Competitive in
Location
Geographic location
Nipplewort is a lowland species
found on arable land and other bare Not present
disturbed ground up to an altitude of Unlikely
about 300m
More likely
Soil type
Very likely
It occurs in loams and clays that are
nutrient-rich with moderate nitrogen
and often damp.
120
Description Scale: 1 space = 1mm
Key features
Plant: The plant has stiff hairs at the base and is
smooth above; it is much branched and angular,
and fairly loosely rooted.
Flowers: The open spikes of yellow dandelion-like
flowers are smaller than those of other yellow
composites.
Biology
Nipplewort is common on cultivated land,
particularly in cereals, though its population is
probably decreasing. Nipplewort is more common
in winter cereals, but is also found in spring crops
in colder, wetter areas. It has relatively large
seeds which may contaminate crop seeds.
Autumn-germinating seeds can overwinter as
rosettes and become very tall plants. Its form
varies widely, depending on location.
Management
Nipplewort is controlled by a range of herbicides
suitable for broad-leaved weeds.
121
Oat
Avena sativa
Competitive in
Germination
S O N D J F M A M J J A
Location
Geographic location
Cultivated oat is found in lowland
areas around Britain as a volunteer Not present
from previous arable crops. Unlikely
Soil type More likely
It occurs on conventional arable
Very likely
soils; it is slightly more tolerant of
low pH than other grain crops.
Key features
Fruit: The lemmas are broad with just the tip
notched. The grains do not have a tuft of hair at
the base.
Lookalikes
Cultivated oat and wild-oat are difficult to tell apart
as plants. The ligule of cultivated oat is shorter
and blunter than that of wild-oat. The leaves are
hairless. When mature, cultivated oat is generally
broader-leaved, paler and more robust than
wild-oat species.
Biology
Most cereal oats are not very winter-hardy, although
volunteers of winter varieties survive after autumn
germination in subsequent crops. They do not
persist as weeds for more than a couple of
years, because the seedbank is less persistent
than for wild-oat, and they are not as competitive
as wild-oat.
Management
Use stale seedbed strategies to allow shed seed to
germinate. Grass leys of 2–3 years reduce seed
populations. Otherwise treat as wild-oat. Herbicides
suitable for wild-oat are effective on cultivated oats.
123
Oilseed rape
Brassica napus ssp. oleifera
Competitive in
S O N D J F M A M J J A
Location
Geographic location
Oilseed rape is mainly a lowland
plant but has been found at altitudes Not present
of up to 420m in Cumbria. It occurs Unlikely
frequently along roadsides, often as
a result of falling from lorries. More likely
Very likely
Soil type
Oilseed rape prefers disturbed soils.
Key features
Plant: Leaves are smooth-surfaced and blue-green
in colour.
Biology
Oilseed rape volunteers commonly occur in
subsequent crops and can reduce wheat yields
significantly. Volunteers of spring rape varieties can
be a serious problem in the winter rape crop.
Autumn-germinating plants stand well over winter.
Growth mainly occurs between mid March and late
August. The plant only reproduces by seed.
Management
After harvest, oilseed rape seeds should be left on
the soil surface for as long as possible, at least 2–3
weeks. A high percentage of seed will germinate in
the autumn and can then be controlled by
cultivations or by herbicides. Soil-incorporated
seeds develop induced secondary dormancy and
can persist for several years.
125
Onion couch
Arrhenatherum elatius
Competitive in
S O N D J F M A M J J A
Location
Geographic location
The bulbous form of false oat-grass,
onion couch is a common arable Not present
weed found all over the British Isles Unlikely
except for high ground above an
altitude of 550m. It is found in a wide More likely
variety of habitats on roadside Very likely
verges, river banks and other waste
ground, and in some arable fields.
Soil type
It tolerates a wide range of soil pH,
from very limey soils and even
limestone scree to neutral soils.
Key features
Plant: Bulbous swellings at the base of the stem
and yellowish roots.
Flowers/fruit: The spikelets have a single long awn.
Biology
Onion couch is a troublesome weed and difficult to
control on cultivated fields. The plants can
overwinter and new shoots are produced from
March. The non-bulbous form can grow from stem
bases detached during ploughing, but the bulbous
form grows only from seed. It is encouraged by
direct drilling of arable crops.
Management
Mouldboard ploughing can bury the stem bases too
deep to emerge. Best control will be achieved by
herbicides such as glyphosate applied when the
grass is actively growing. This can be difficult near
and around crops post-emergence and is best done
in uncropped land such as summer fallows.
127
Pale persicaria
Persicaria lapathifolia
Competitive in
Location
Geographic location
Pale persicara is associated with a
wide range of habitats in both open Not present
and disturbed sites and in cultivated Unlikely
fields, up to a maximum recorded
altitude of 450m. It is less frequent in More likely
the north on less organic soils. Very likely
Soil type
It prefers slightly acid soils rich in
humus and nutrients, often
sandy loams.
Key features
Young plant: The first true leaves are silvery with
short hairs.
Plant: The sheath covering the leaf stem base has
no hairs and lies loosely against the stem. The
flowering stem is hairy.
Lookalikes
Pale persicaria may be confused with redshank: the
first true leaves of pale persicaria are long and
narrow and have silvery hairs, which also cover the
stem; the first true leaves of redshank are broad and
the plant is not hairy.
Biology
Pale persicaria is a common weed in all crops,
particularly spring-sown ones. It may occur in open
crops of winter wheat, possibly preferring more
organic soils than the similar redshank. Flowers are
self-pollinated or cross-pollinated by insects. The
seeds may germinate in spring only after chilling.
Management
It is controlled by a wide range of hormone
and sulfonylurea herbicides in cereals and by
many residual herbicides in most spring-sown
broad-leaved crops.
129
Parsley-piert
Aphanes arvensis
Competitive in
S O N D J F M A M J J A
Location
Geographic location
Parsley-piert is found on arable land
and droughted soils, and on other Not present
sites with a large exposure of bare Unlikely
soil, usually in lowland habitats up to
an altitude of 300m. More likely
Very likely
Soil type
It grows in dry alkaline or acidic
soils, but rarely below pH 5.
Key features
Plant: The plant appears to have no flowers, as
they are green and inconspicuous.
Biology
Parsley-piert grows before the crop fully establishes
and in late summer after harvest. It mainly
germinates in autumn from seeds which come from
a persistent seedbank. Young plants can overwinter.
It is very drought resistant.
Management
It can be reduced by ploughing and spring cropping.
Grass breaks can reduce the seedbank. It is
encouraged by fallow, reduced cultivation and direct
drilling, so mouldboard ploughs should be used.
131
Pea
Pisum sativum
Competitive in
Flowering
Germination
S O N D J F M A M J J A
Location
Geographic location
Field pea occurs in arable areas in
Britain as a volunteer from previous Not present
crops and may also occur on waste Unlikely
ground and field margins.
More likely
Soil type
Very likely
It prefers well drained, highly
fertile soils.
Key features
Young plant: Stiff but small with no visible
cotyledons. There is a pair of projections at the
base of each leaf.
Biology
There are a large number of cultivated strains of
pea, grown for food and animal fodder. Although
plants can germinate in autumn and occasionally
withstand heavy frost, they usually germinate in
spring. They prefer cool moist growing conditions
and are shallow-rooted and therefore susceptible to
drought. Seeds can germinate at temperatures
above 4.5°C. Although peas emerge and can cause
lodging in cereal fields, they do not persist to a
second season if controlled.
Management
Seedlings emerging in autumn or early spring are
usually killed by continuous frost. A wide range of
herbicides are available to control peas in cereals
and grass crops.
133
Perennial rye-grass
Lolium perenne
Competitive in
S O N D J F M A M J J A
Location
Geographic location
Perennial rye-grass is found on a
wide range of habitats, which may Not present
have been sown for grass, in Unlikely
meadows, pastures and on
demolition sites. It does not grow More likely
above an altitude of 400m. Very likely
Soil type
It occurs on soils within the pH
range 5–8.
Key features
Young plant: The backs of the leaves are shiny.
Fruit: The spikes have no awns.
Lookalikes
Perennial rye-grass may be confused with
rough-stalked meadow-grass when young. The
flowerhead is similar to common couch but the
spikelets of rye grasses are at 90 degrees to the
stem while couch spikelets lie with their flattened
side next to the stem.
Biology
Perennial rye-grass can become a weed in arable
crops where pasture forms part of the rotation. The
plants remain green all winter and continue to grow.
It flowers in early or late summer. Seeds germinate
immediately on shedding, and stems can root.
Management
Control with glyphosate in fallows, before break
crops or as a pre-harvest treatment or with specific
herbicides within crops. Clean equipment between
fields to reduce seed spread.
135
Perennial sow-thistle
Sonchus arvensis
Competitive in
Location
Geographic location
Mainly confined to England and the
coastal areas of Wales, Scotland and Not present
Ireland, perennial sow-thistle is Unlikely
usually found on roadsides and
verges and arable field edges. More likely
Very likely
Soil type
It prefers damp to wet, heavy deep
loams and clays, high in nitrates
and humus.
Key features
Flower: Typically, the branches of the flowering
shoot and the flowerheads bear tiny yellow
glandular hairs.
Biology
Perennial sow-thistle is a weed of field margins but
may occur in patches in arable fields; it is most
often a nuisance in perennial crops. The flowers are
fertilised by insects and can be cross- or self-fertile.
Seeds are dispersed by wind and germinate in
spring, requiring chilling.
Management
It is readily controlled in open ground, but can be
awkward to control selectively in crops other than
cereals and brassicas. As perennial sow-thistle
can also spread from fragments of rhizomes,
autumn cultivation to weaken rhizomes may
assist in control.
137
Pineappleweed
Matricaria discoides
Competitive in
Location
Geographic location
Pineappleweed grows in all arable
crops and on compacted soil or Not present
habitats with a wide proportion of Unlikely
bare ground. It is usually a lowland
species but has been found at an More likely
altitude of 530m. Very likely
Soil type
It is restricted to damp and nutrient-
rich sandy soils and loams, pH >5.
Key features
Plant and flower: It smells strongly of pineapple
when bruised.
Biology
Pineappleweed is usually found on tracks and in
gateways, but also encroaches onto arable land,
preferring compacted soils. It is found in both winter
and spring crops and can become a nuisance in
perennial crops where there is a lot of vehicle
movement. Seedlings germinating in autumn can
overwinter. Spring-germinating plants can set seed
within 40–50 days. Seeds are usually dispersed on
boots and tyres.
Management
It is readily controlled with herbicides and
in-crop cultivation.
139
Potato
Solanum tuberosum
Competitive in
Seed Germination
Volunteers
S O N D J F M A M J J A
Location
Geographic location
Potato usually occurs as volunteers
from previous cropping and so is Not present
most likely to be found in the arable Unlikely
areas to the east of the British Isles.
It also grows in areas where More likely
domestic waste has been left. Very likely
Soil type
Potato prefers sandy loams, silt
loams, loams and peat soils.
Key features
It contains the poison solanine, in the green parts of
the plant and in tubers exposed to light, which can
be fatal to humans and livestock.
Biology
Volunteer potatoes can be very competitive weeds
in subsequent crops. They develop from tubers left
in the soil or as seedlings from true seeds in spring.
Management
The best control is good harvesting practice in
potato crops. In cereal crops, sulfonylureas have an
effect in reducing further tuber growth. Pre-harvest
treatment with glyphosate is effective if the plants
are still green. In most vegetable crops, fruit crops
and legumes only physical control is possible.
Otherwise using glyphosate at or near flowering of
potato plants is the most effective chemical
treatment. Potatoes do not persist in dense crops
such as oilseed rape or grassland.
141
Prickly sow-thistle
Sonchus asper
Competitive in
Location
Geographic location
Prickly sow-thistle inhabits a wide
variety of lowland places including Not present
verges, waste ground, railway Unlikely
lines, field margins of arable fields
and gardens. More likely
Very likely
Soil type
It likes nitrogen-rich loams or
nutrient-rich sandy and stony soils
which are not too dry.
Key features
Plant: The glossy leaves are a rich green and have
sharp prickly edges and rounded bases which clasp
the stem.
Leaves: The petals are red grey underneath.
Biology
Prickly sow-thistle is less common on arable land
than it once was. It occurs mainly in vegetable
crops, but can be found in cereals and increasingly
in other winter crops. Plants which germinate in
autumn overwinter as rosettes, producing flowers in
May; plants germinating in spring flower in June.
The latter can set seed in 10 weeks. Prickly
sow-thistle only reproduces by seed and is
distributed by wind.
Management
In row crops, hoeing can be used for control where
herbicides are not available. In winter cereals, use
fallows to reduce seed production. Prickly
sow-thistle does not persist in grassy rotations.
143
Ragwort
Senecio jacobaea
Competitive in
Location
Geographic location
Ragwort is commonly found on
grasslands and neglected land, Not present
headlands and verges. Growing to Unlikely
an altitude of nearly 700m.
More likely
Soil type
Very likely
It grows in a wide range of soils,
between pH 5 and 7.
Key features
Plant: The plant contains the poison jacobine,
which is fatal to livestock.
Biology
Ragwort can be abundant in poor pasture and
wasteland, particularly on sandy free-draining soils.
It is rarely found as an arable weed, but does
establish in fallows and field margins. Seedlings
germinating in autumn can overwinter as leafy
plants. The plant may take more than two years to
flower. Seed is not dispersed far from the parent
plant, but can survive grazing and can be
transported by sheep. The flowering shoots die
by winter.
Management
Dense grass swards which are not over-grazed
reduce establishment. In grass, MCPA or 2,4-D may
be used at full dose on the rosettes in late spring or
early autumn.
145
Red dead-nettle
Lamium purpureum
Competitive in
Location
Geographic location
Red dead-nettle mainly grows on
sites with bare soil, such as arable Not present
land, gardens, soil heaps and Unlikely
demolition sites. It is generally a
lowland species growing up to an More likely
altitude of 300m, but has been found Very likely
at 600m.
Soil type
It prefers relatively fertile soils, sandy
loams with moderate organic matter
and rich in nutrients.
Key features
Young plant: The first true leaves are more
triangular than those of henbit dead-nettle.
Plant: The foliage is often tinged with purple.
Lookalikes
Red dead-nettle may be confused with henbit
dead-nettle; dead-nettles can be difficult to
distinguish at the seedling and young plant stages.
Biology
Red dead-nettle is common on arable land; it may
be encouraged by minimal cultivation techniques.
The plants may overwinter with green leaves but it
is mainly annual. It can set seed before the canopy
is developed. Non-flowering shoot tips can also
re-root after spring cultivations and can go on to
establish and set seed. Seeds can be locally moved
by ants.
Management
Although it occurs in both winter and spring
crops, it is more common in early sown winter
crops, suggesting it may be controlled by spring
cropping. A large range of herbicides suitable for
broad-leaved weeds may be used.
147
Red fescue
Festuca rubra
Competitive in
Location
Geographic location
Red fescue grows over the whole
of the British Isles in many Not present
grassy habitats such as road Unlikely
verges, meadows and pastures
up to an altitude of 1,080m. It has More likely
many varieties. Very likely
Soil type
It grows in alkaline-rich soils and
even rocky habitats, but is not
usually found where there is a large
amount of exposed soils.
Key features
Plant: Stems are red at the base.
Biology
Red fescue can establish in arable land but does
not persist with cultivation. It is commonly found in
field edges and many other relatively undisturbed
habitats. Red fescue grows rapidly in spring after
overwintering. It can also reproduce vegetatively
when the rhizomes which attach child plants die.
Management
It is relatively tolerant of foliar-acting herbicides
because of its bristle-like leaves reducing uptake,
so high doses are generally required.
149
Redshank
Persicaria maculosa
Competitive in
Location
Geographic location
Redshank is a lowland weed
growing to an altitude of up to Not present
200m. It is found on disturbed Unlikely
bare soils, such as arable land
and soil heaps. More likely
Very likely
Soil type
It is found on a wide range of soil
types but prefers sandy soils rich in
nutrients and organic matter and
well aerated, in the pH range 5–7.
Key features
Plant: The stem is hairless and the leaves have a
characteristic blotch.
Flowers: The flowering spike is less dense than that
of pale persicaria.
Lookalikes
Redshank may be confused with pale persicaria:
pale persicaria has silvery hairs on the first true
leaves, but redshank is not hairy. The first leaf of
redshank is broad but that of pale persicaria is long
and narrow.
Biology
Redshank is a common weed of spring crops.
Seeds are retained on the plant and can
contaminate grain at harvest. During cultivations
plant fragments can root at the nodes. Plants are
frost susceptible.
Management
Redshank is controlled by a range of hormonal and
sulfonylurea herbicides in cereals and by many
residual herbicides in most spring sown-crops.
151
Rough-stalked meadow-grass
Poa trivialis
Competitive in
S O N D J F M A M J J A
Location
Geographic location
Rough-stalked meadow-grass
occurs in damp, fertile and Not present
sometimes disturbed land with Unlikely
large amounts of bare soil. It is
most frequent in lowland areas More likely
but has been identified at an Very likely
altitude of 760m.
Soil type
It grows on all but the most acidic
soils but is usually found at pH> 5.
It prefers moisture-retentive soils.
Key features
Plant: The leaf sheath is rough and the lower leaf
surface is glossy with a prominent ridge.
Biology
Rough-stalked meadow-grass is palatable to stock
and is useful for hay. It tends to flower in winter
cereals, but spreads by stolons and does not
produce flowerheads in spring cereals. Although
plants can overwinter they do not grow before April.
Growth in spring is fast, but leaves are short-lived.
Seedlings generally germinate immediately after
seeds are shed, although some remain dormant.
Vegetative reproduction can also occur from
stolon fragments.
Management
Ploughing reduces populations so that plants tend
to be more frequent in minimum tillage. A wide
range of herbicides is available for controlling rough
meadow-grass. Although it is harder to control than
annual meadowgrass, some residual grass
herbicides are reasonably effective. In winter rape,
propyzamide and carbetamide are also effective.
153
Round-leaved fluellen
Kickxia spuria
Competitive in
Location
Geographic location
Round-leaved fluellen is a lowland
species which often grows with the Not present
sharp-leaved species in cornfields Unlikely
and other arable fields and gardens.
More likely
Soil type
Very likely
It likes weakly acid to weakly
alkaline soils low in nutrients,
including light soils over boulder
clay. It prefers light conditions.
Key features
Young plant: The first true leaves are rounder than
those of sharp-leaved fluellen.
Plant: The leaves are almost circular.
Flowers: The flowers resemble those of
snapdragon and are bright yellow with a brown
upper lip.
Lookalikes
Round-leaved fluellen is difficult to distinguish from
sharp-leaved fluellen: the cotyledons are smaller and
rounder while the first true leaves are also rounder.
Biology
Round-leaved fluellen needs warmer conditions
than sharp-leaved fluellen so it is more common in
southern Britain. It is a poorly competitive species
found in uncompetitive crops, particularly perennial
and row crops. Seeds germinate in spring and set
seed usually after harvest. Plants often grow
lower than the combine cut, so can set seeds in
late-ploughed fields.
Management
It is readily controlled by cultivation and
seldom found in competitive winter crops or
grass ley rotations.
155
Rye brome
Bromus secalinus
Competitive in
S O N D J F M A M J J A
Location
Geographic location
Rye brome is a lowland weed, found
in cereal fields, and waste ground Not present
and some improved leys. Unlikely
Soil type More likely
It is usually found in areas on
Very likely
soils with average moisture and
reasonable but not high nitrogen,
pH about 5.
Key features
Flower: The leaf sheaths are usually hairless or the
lower ones can be sparsely hairy.
Flowers/fruit: It has flattened spikelets with
short awns.
Biology
Rye brome was most probably introduced to the UK
as a contaminant of cereal seeds. It was once
grown as a grain crop and was very common as a
weed in the past, often dominating fields of wheat.
With improved methods of cereal grain cleaning, it
is now uncommon to rare, generally found in
headlands of winter-sown crops. It propagates only
by seed and can be found in large patches.
Management
Shed seed should be kept on the surface for 4
weeks before cultivation to allow ripening and killed
with a glyphosate application before sowing
subsequent crops. Deep cultivations or mouldboard
ploughing, to bury seeds below 20cm, will reduce
numbers in following years. Spring cropping is
effective for control, as is fallow land, as long as
emerging plants are controlled before setting seed.
Moderate control can be achieved by a variety of
herbicides in cereals. Greater control may be
achieved in broad-leaved crops.
157
Scarlet pimpernel
Anagallis arvensis
Competitive in
Location
Geographic location
Scarlet pimpernel is a common
annual weed of cultivated and waste Not present
ground with a widespread Unlikely
distribution in arable soils and some
semi-natural habitats. The blue form More likely
prefers south-facing slopes. Very likely
Soil type
It grows in many soil types with
neutral pH in partial shade to sun.
Key features
Young plant/plant: There are tiny brown dots on
the undersides of the leaves. All parts are
poisonous to poultry and stock.
Flowers: The flowers tend to open in full sunlight
and remain closed on dull or rainy days.
Lookalikes
Scarlet pimpernel may be confused with common
chickweed: the seedlings are similar but chickweed
seedlings have a long hypocotyl. The leaves of
chickweed have hairy stalks and are light green,
while the underside of scarlet pimpernel leaves
is spotted.
Biology
Scarlet pimpernel occurs frequently in spring-sown
crops. Seed is widely dispersed as a result of
agricultural management, particularly as a
contaminant of crop seed. Scarlet pimpernel is
often associated with rarer arable weeds.
Plants regenerate by seed which requires light
for germination. Plants can overwinter and
summer-shed seeds can give rise to a second
generation.
Management
Control by using a stale seedbed.
159
Scented mayweed
Matricaria recutita
Competitive in
Location
Geographic location
Scented mayweed is a lowland
plant or arable cereal fields and Not present
waste places. Unlikely
Soil type More likely
It is usually found on light soils,
Very likely
but also occurs on heavy clays
and loams.
Key features
Flowers: The flowerheads give off a distinctive
chamomile smell when crushed. When the
flowerhead is split, the end of the stem where the
petals are attached is hollow.
Lookalikes
Scented mayweed may be confused with scentless
mayweed. The mayweeds are difficult to distinguish
in their nonflowering stages.
Biology
Scented mayweed is locally abundant on arable
land and causes yield loss in cereals and oilseed
rape. It emerges in winter and early spring; if
germinating in autumn, it overwinters as a rosette.
It infests both winter and spring crops, which makes
long-term management without herbicide difficult.
The seedbank can survive short-term grass leys.
Management
A wide range of herbicides is available for
scented mayweed control in wheat and as yet
no herbicide resistance has been identified in
this species though it has been suspected in
other Matricaria species.
161
Scentless mayweed
Tripleurospermum inodorum
Competitive in
Location
Geographic location
Scentless mayweed is mainly a
lowland species growing to a Not present
maximum altitude of 500m, in open Unlikely
habitats such as arable soils and
less frequently other disturbed sites. More likely
Very likely
Soil type
It prefers warm, fertile and
heavy soils with pH >4.5 and
preferably >5.5.
Key features
Flowers: Scentless mayweed flowers are flat or
convex. When the daisy-like flowerhead is split, the
end of the stem to which the petals attach is solid.
Lookalikes
Scentless mayweed may be confused with scented
mayweed: the mayweeds are difficult to distinguish
in their non-flowering stages
Biology
Scentless mayweed is the most widespread of
the mayweeds found on arable land. It can be a
problem in both winter- and spring-sown crops.
It is competitive in wheat and oilseed rape and
the seeds can clog sieves and contaminate
grain samples.
Plants of scentless mayweed can overwinter from
later germination. Newly emerged plants are fairly
slow-growing. It reproduces from seed moved by
humans, birds or stock.
Management
Scentless mayweed can be controlled by a wide
range of herbicides, but because of its long period
of emergence it may need repeated treatments.
Populations resistant to 2, 4-D have occurred in
cereal crops in the UK.
163
Sharp-leaved fluellen
Kickxia elatine
Competitive in
Location
Geographic location
Sharp-leaved fluellen is found in
arable fields, field margins, gardens Not present
and waste ground. Unlikely
Soil type More likely
It likes weakly acid to weakly
Very likely
alkaline soils, including light soils,
over boulder clay. It can tolerate
poorly aerated soils as it is
shallow-rooted, but prefers fairly
light conditions.
Key features
Plant: The leaves are arrow-shaped with backward-
pointing lobes.
Flower: The flowers are like small snapdragon
flowers, yellow with a purple upper lip.
Lookalikes
Sharp-leaved fluellen may be confused with
round-leaved fluellen, although the cotyledons are
more oval and notched at the tip, and the first true
leaves end in blunt points.
Biology
Sharp-leaved fluellen is a poorly competitive
species found in uncompetitive crops: it is most
successful in perennial crops and row crops. It is
seldom found in competitive winter crops or grass
ley rotations. Seeds germinate in spring and set
seed usually after harvest. Plants often grow
lower than the combine cut, so can set seeds in
late-ploughed fields.
Management
It is readily controlled by cultivations.
165
Shepherd’s-needle
Scandix pecten-veneris
Competitive in
Germination
S O N D J F M A M J J A
Location
Geographic location
Shepherd’s-needle is a rare lowland
weed, found up to an altitude of Not present
320m, growing in cultivated areas Unlikely
such as old or current arable land
and gardens. More likely
Very likely
Soil type
It likes warm, preferably chalky clay
soils which are dry in summer and
nutrient-rich.
Key features
Young plant: The cotyledons are pointed and
very long.
Flowers: As the fruits mature and extend, the
flowers appear to be on top of ‘needles’.
Lookalikes
Shepherd’s-needle may be confused with wild
carrot as young plants: the first true leaves of
wild carrot are hairy and coarser than those of
shepherd’s-needle, which has few hairs.
Shepherd’s-needle cotyledons are much longer
and thinner than those of wild carrot.
Biology
Shepherd’s-needle is highly competitive in spring
cereal crops and open crops of winter wheat, even
when high levels of nitrogen are applied. It has
re-appeared in some areas of the country in the last
few years, preferring light soils. It can reduce
combine efficiency when the stems and long seeds
can become trapped. Shepherd’s-needle
reproduces only by seed. Seeds are dispersed
mechanically from the parent plant and can also
hook onto hair or clothing.
Management
The re-appearance of shepherd’s-needle in cereals
may be due to the reduction in the use of 2, 4-D
and MCPA at high doses, but combinations of
sulfonylureas with contact herbicides and hormones
can be effective.
167
Shepherd’s-purse
Capsella bursa-pastoris
Competitive in
Seeds/plant: 2,000–40,000
Location
Geographic location
Shepherd’s-purse is usually a
lowland weed but may grow to an Not present
altitude of 400m. It is found on Unlikely
disturbed, especially fertile ground,
with areas of bare soil and is usually More likely
associated with broad-leaved crops Very likely
rather than cereal crops.
Soil type
It generally grows in nutrient-rich
soils, with pH >5, such as humus-
rich loams and nitrate-rich sandy
soils. Shepherd’s-purse avoids
wet soils.
Key features
Young plant: The hairs on the young leaves are
unbranched (a hand lens is required).
Lookalikes
As it is so variable, shepherd’s-purse can resemble
several other species, particularly early stages of
common poppy. Note the simple unbranched hairs
of shepherd’s-purse.
Biology
Shepherd’s purse is widespread in crops in all
seasons in the UK and throughout most of the
world. It is more of a problem in oilseed rape or
other brassica crops, so this weed should be
controlled in the cereal crop. Germination can occur
throughout the year and plants are able to
overwinter. Plants have a short life span. The
sticky-coated seeds may be transported on
footwear or agricultural machinery.
Management
It is susceptible to a wide range of herbicides.
169
Small nettle
Urtica urens
Competitive in
Location
Geographic location
Small nettle is found up to an
altitude of 500m on well-cultivated Not present
arable land, especially in leaf crops Unlikely
as it germinates in spring, and in
gardens, farmyards and other More likely
cultivated soils. Very likely
Soil type
It likes well-drained neutral soils high
in nitrogen.
Key features
Plant: The leaves are rounder and more pointed
and toothed than those of common nettle.
Flower: The male and female flowers are borne on
the same plant in little clusters close to the stems.
Biology
Small nettle is more common in broad-leaved crops
than in cereals and in spring rather than winter
crops. It is poorly competitive in vigorous cereal
crops. Plants are susceptible to frost but seeds can
germinate at low temperatures and plants can
overwinter in sheltered areas. Seeds can be
transported by ingestion by animals or in soil.
The seedbank is persistent.
Management
Small nettle can be controlled by a wide range of
herbicides in cereal crops. It is susceptible to
hoeing in row crops.
171
Smooth sow-thistle
Sonchus oleraceus
Competitive in
Location
Geographic location
Growing to an altitude of 365m,
smooth sow-thistle is found on Not present
arable fields, verges, roadsides, Unlikely
gardens, waste lands and
manure heaps. More likely
Very likely
Soil type
It likes nitrogen-rich loams or
nutrient-rich sandy and stony soils
which are not too dry.
Key features
Plant: The leaves are glossy and softly prickly with
a wide triangular lobe at the tip, clasping the stem.
Biology
Smooth sow-thistle is increasing in arable rotations,
particularly in winter crops. Autumn-germinating
plants can overwinter as rosettes and flower in May;
spring-germinating plants flower in June.
Management
In row crops, hoeing is an alternative to herbicide
use. Control in uncropped land to reduce seed
return. Smooth sow-thistle does not persist in
grassy rotations. There is a wide range of herbicides
available for control in cereal crops.
173
Soft brome
Bromus hordeaceus
Competitive in
Germination
S O N D J F M A M J J A
Location
Geographic location
Soft brome prefers disturbed, damp
and grassy habitats, but is not found Not present
in waterlogged ground. It usually Unlikely
grows at altitudes of up to 400m.
More likely
Soil type
Very likely
Prefers neutral to alkaline soils,
pH >5.
Key features
Plant: The stems are very hairy and more upright
than those of meadow brome.
Biology
Soft brome is found in grass and arable crops and
field margins and is often a contaminant in rye and
fescue seeds. Seeds germinate rapidly in autumn
and young plants can grow rapidly in cooler
months; plants may remain green over winter.
Vegetative growth occurs in autumn and spring.
Compact flowerheads occur in early summer.
Management
Shed seed should be kept on the surface for 4
weeks before cultivation to allow ripening and killed
with a glyphosate application before sowing
subsequent crops. Deep cultivations or mouldboard
ploughing, to bury seeds below 20cm, will reduce
numbers in following years. Spring cropping is
effective for control, as is fallow land, as long as
emerging plants are controlled before setting seed.
Moderate control can be achieved by a variety of
herbicides in cereals. Greater control may be
achieved in broad-leaved crops.
175
Spear thistle
Cirsium vulgare
Competitive in
Location
Geographic location
Spear thistle is found all over the
British Isles up to an altitude of Not present
850m, in many habitats including Unlikely
hedgerows, field margins pastures
and arable fields. More likely
Very likely
Soil type
It prefers fertile and well-drained
disturbed soils.
Key features
Plants: The stems have spiny wings and the young
leaves have a hairy upper surface.
Lookalikes
Spear thistle may be confused with creeping
thistle; the young plants of thistles are often difficult
to tell apart. Spear thistle has a large and densely
hairy leaf second, creeping thistle has fewer
marginal spines.
Biology
Spear thistle is common in arable fields. The plant
dies in the autumn after flowering. It reproduces
only from seeds, which have little dormancy and
germinate in autumn or spring; the immature plants
can overwinter as a rosette. Most of the seeds
(up to 93%) are eaten by birds or small mammals.
Management
Being a biennial, it does not persist in arable
rotations or routinely cultivated soils, but is
encouraged by fallow or grass breaks or perennial
crops. Seedlings are controlled by harrowing.
Established plants are not easily controlled by
mechanical means. MCPA herbicides can be used
in cereal crops.
177
Spreading hedge-parsley
Torilis arvensis
Competitive in
Flowering
Germination
S O N D J F M A M J J A
Location
Geographic location
Spreading hedge-parsley is found in
lowland areas, usually in field margins Not present
and late-sown crops or in waste and Unlikely
disturbed ground. It is increasingly rare
and geographically isolated in small More likely
pockets in the south of England. Very likely
Soil type
It is found on chalky clay soils of low
moisture and fertility but can grow on
sands and gravels.
Key features
Young plant: It is slightly hairy.
Plant: The stem is finely grooved.
Biology
Spreading hedge-parsley germinates in autumn,
suggesting that the seed is short-lived. The fruit is
transported by hooking on to fur or clothing.
Management
Spreading hedge-parsley is not competitive to
modern crops, and its late flowering disadvantages
it in early harvested and early-ploughed crops.
179
Sugar beet
Beta vulgaris
Competitive in
Germination
S O N D J F M A M J J A
Location
Geographic location
Sugar beet is found usually in
lowland areas as a volunteer from
previous cropping.
Soil type
It is found on light arable soils
180
Description Scale: 1 space = 1mm
Key features
Fruit: It is distinguished from other beets by thicker
leaves and a large bulbous tap root.
Biology
Weed beet are any unwanted sugar beet growing
within and between the rows of sown beet or other
crops. They grow from groundkeepers or from seed
shed by bolting crop plants or other weed beets. As
seedlings, they are indistinguishable from sugar
beet. Sugar beet which germinates in spring usually
overwinters as a leafy rosette before flowering in the
following year. However in some cases the plants
flower in the first year (in a crop these beets are
known as bolters) and are prolific seed producers.
Management
Crops containing bolters should be harvested as
early as possible to reduce the production of viable
seeds. The sulfonylurea group of herbicides is
particularly active on weed beet.
181
Sunflower
Helianthus annuus
Competitive in
Germination
S O N D J F M A M J J A
Location
Geographic location
Sunflower grows mostly in the
Midlands and south of England, mainly Not present
as a volunteer from previous sunflower Unlikely
crops, bird-seed etc., on wasteland and
banks. More likely
Very likely
Soil type
It requires nutrient-rich and moist soils
to grow.
Key features
Flowers: Flowerheads face the sun and sometimes
track it. They dip as they ripen.
Biology
Sunflower seeds germinate in late spring and plants
flower and set seeds in the same growing season.
The seeds are eaten by birds and small mammals.
Management
Although it may occur as a volunteer in the two
years following a crop it rarely persists for longer. It
is easily cleaned out from most other crop seeds. It
is controlled by a range of herbicides suitable for
broad-leaved crops.
183
Timothy
Phleum pratense
Competitive in
S O N D J F M A M J J A
Location
Geographic location
Timothy is found in a range of
grasslands including meadows and Not present
rough grassland up to an altitude Unlikely
of 450m.
More likely
Soil type
Very likely
It prefers heavy slightly damp soils.
184
Description Scale: 1 space = 1mm
Key features
Plant: The plants have an upright habit.
Biology
Timothy is a common component of pastures and
other sown grassland and can be found in cereal
crops in grassy rotations. Timothy emerges from
both seed and tussock fragments. Tillering occurs
in spring and autumn and stems remain green over
winter and grow in the spring; a second period of
growth may occur in July.
Management
In winter cereals, some control with herbicides may
be possible. It does not persist into spring crop
breaks or if soils are routinely cultivated.
185
Venus’s-looking-glass
Legousia hybrida
Competitive in
Location
Geographic location
Venus’s-looking-glass is a lowland
weed found in arable fields, or on Not present
disturbed soils such as motorway Unlikely
embankments.
More likely
Soil type
Very likely
It prefers chalky soils and low
nitrogen conditions.
Key features
Fruit: Only two of the three seed head ‘cylinders’
are visible from one side.
Biology
Venus’s-looking-glass can germinate from autumn
through to spring. It is insect-pollinated. It is rarely a
problem in competitive crops but can be found in
newly emerged crops.
Management
It does not persist in winter cropping rotations and
is readily controlled in early spring by cultivation.
187
Wall speedwell
Veronica arvensis
Competitive in
Location
Geographic location
Wall speedwell grows to an altitude
of 800m and is usually found on arable Not present
land, tracks, waste ground, heaths, Unlikely
grasslands and gravelled paths.
More likely
Soil type
Very likely
It likes nutrient-rich moderately
acidic loose loams or sandy loams
with some humus.
Key features
Plant: The leaves are small and long, oval in shape.
Fruit: It is heart-shaped.
Biology
Wall speedwell is very common on arable land,
particularly in winter cereals, but is not competitive
in vigorous cereal crops. It does not persist in grass
leys. Although it can root from stem fragments, this
does not occur in the field. Seeds shed in the
summer can germinate in the following autumn,
giving rise to overwintering plants, or germinate in
the following spring. Seeds are moved by humans
or cattle or air currents.
Management
Wall speedwell does not thrive in dense crops. It is
not affected by minimum tillage. Cereal crops may
be harrowed early in the season and row crops can
be hoed.
It can be controlled by a range of herbicides
suitable for broad-leaved weeds in cereal crops.
189
Wheat
Triticum aestivium
Competitive in
Location
Geographic location
Wheat grows as volunteers in
subsequent crops, so tends to be Not present
found in arable areas. Unlikely
Soil type More likely
It prefers a soil which holds together
Very likely
well with good water retention.
It prefers a high nitrogen input.
Key features
Fruit: It has large grains.
Biology
Volunteer wheat can occur as a weed in the
subsequent crop. It can germinate in early
autumn or spring and has one generation a year. It
seldom persists for more than one season if
controlled; seed buried for two years is unlikely to
remain viable.
Management
Where wheat seeds have been shed during harvest,
light harrowing will encourage germination, to allow
control before sowing the next crop. Wheat cannot
be controlled by herbicides in other cereals but a
wide range of herbicides can control wheat in
other crops.
191
White campion
Silene latifolia
Competitive in
Location
Geographic location
White campion grows to an altitude
of 425m and is found on arable fields, Not present
waste ground and road verges. Unlikely
Soil type More likely
It prefers deep well-drained soils.
Very likely
Key features
Young plant: First true leaves are bluntly pointed.
Flowers: White, deeply notched petals.
Biology
White campion is common on arable land, emerging
largely in spring crops, but it can persist to
produce large plants in perennial/biennial crops.
About half of overwintering adult plants can survive
a hard winter.
Management
It is seldom a problem in winter rotations, or where
there are grass ley breaks. Large plants can be
pulled in some crops or cut before flowering to
prevent seeding.
193
Wild carrot
Daucus carota
Competitive in
S O N D J F M A M J J A
Location
Geographic location
Wild carrot is found up to an altitude
of 400m in England and the warmer Not present
coastal areas of Scotland, Wales Unlikely
and Ireland. It prefers disturbed or
waste ground, or open turf on More likely
chalky downland. Very likely
Soil type
It prefers infertile but well-drained
chalky soils.
194
Description Scale: 1 space = 1mm
Key features
Plant: It smells of carrot when bruised. The
flowering stem appears to zigzag. The buds and
dried flowerheads are cup-shaped.
Lookalikes
Wild carrot may be confused with shepherd’s-
needle as young plants: the first true leaves of wild
carrot are hairy and coarser than shepherd’s-needle
which has few hairs.
Biology
Wild carrot is usually found in field margins and
seldom encroaches far into arable land, but it can
be a problem in perennial crops.
It reproduces by seed. Autumn-germinating plants
remain green overwinter. The flowering stem dies in
the autumn while often retaining seed. It is capable
of interbreeding with cultivated carrot.
Management
It does not persist where there is routine cultivation.
Herbicides are available for use in cereal crops.
195
Wild-oat
Avena fatua
Competitive in
Location
Geographic location
Wild-oat is found mainly to the south of
Northumberland and in Scottish arable Not present
areas. It is a grass of lowland areas but Unlikely
it can grow up to an altitude of 300m.
More likely
Soil type
Very likely
It prefers highly fertile, moist and
weakly acid to weakly alkaline soils.
Key features
Plant: The leaf margins are hairy towards the base.
Fruit: There is a tuft of tawny hairs at the base, when
ripe, the spikelets break apart with visible scars.
Lookalikes
All the oat species are difficult to tell apart at the
seedling stage. It is difficult to tell the different oats
apart as plants: winter wild-oat germinates in the
autumn while wild-oat usually germinates in spring.
The leaf margins of wild-oat are hairier near the
base and the spikelets are smaller than those of
winter wild-oat. The lemmas of wild-oat are broader
than those of winter wild-oat and end in two small
teeth. These two species are easiest to tell apart
when the fruit is ripe. Wild-oat seeds separate in the
spikelet with no scar.
Biology
Wild-oats reproduce only from seed. Although some
germinate in autumn, tiller in early spring and are
resistant to frost, most germinate in the spring. One
wild-oat plant per square metre can reduce yields
by up to 1t/ha in winter cereals and up to 0.6t/ha
in spring cereals.
Management
It is cheaper to control wild-oat in break crops.
Delay cultivation as long as possible after harvest to
allow mice and birds to eat the freshly shed seeds.
Burial will increase seed dormancy. Hand rogueing
is possible. Clean the combine between fields to
prevent seeds being spread.
197
Wild pansy
Viola tricolor
Competitive in
Germination
S O N D J F M A M J J A
Location
Geographic location
Wild pansy can grow to an altitude
of 575m and is found in slightly acidic Not present
habitats and cultivated ground, gardens Unlikely
and wasteland. It is most often found in
damp cool climates. More likely
Very likely
Soil type
It grows on sandy, stony and infertile
soils, pH range 5–7.
Key features
Plant: Wild pansy is larger and more robust than
field pansy.
Flowers: The petals are larger than the sepals.
Biology
Wild pansy is less commonly seen in fields than
field pansy. It is found on stony arable land in both
winter and spring crops; seeds may contaminate
grain and be difficult to clean. Wild pansy is not as
competitive as field pansy, but has a similar life
cycle; autumn-germinating plants can overwinter
and flower early in the following season. The seeds
are dispersed from an exploding seed head.
Management
Residual herbicide treatments are generally effective
in autumn and spring sown crops.
199
Wild radish
Raphanus raphanistrum
Competitive in
Location
Geographic location
Wild radish is found in arable fields,
waste ground and paths up to an Not present
altitude of 380m. Unlikely
Soil type More likely
It prefers lime-free but nutrient-rich
Very likely
sandy and loam soils.
Key features
Plant: The teeth on the edges of the upper leaves
are blunt.
Fruit: The pod appears beaded as it shrinks
around the seeds. It has a long beak and breaks
easily at the joints.
Lookalikes
It is similar to charlock, as both have roughly
hairy stems.
Biology
Wild radish, also called runch, is one of the
commonest weeds worldwide. It emerges mostly in
spring and therefore in spring crops, but it
germinates also in early-sown winter oilseed rape.
These autumn-germinating seedlings are generally
killed by frosts but can persist in a mild winter. The
seed can be transported as a seed contaminant
and can remain viable in manures. Statutory seed
regulations for the UK and for England (2002)
specify that the seeds must not be found in cereal
grain samples. It is a particular problem in oilseed
rape crops where the seed cannot be separated.
Management
Wild radish is controlled by residual herbicides,
hormones and sulfonylureas in cereals and residual
herbicides in most spring crops. However it is very
difficult to control in brassica crops.
201
Winter wild-oat
Avena sterilis
Competitive in
Germination
S O N D J F M A M J J A
Location
Geographic location
The range of winter wild-oat has grown
from its focus in Oxfordshire into East Not present
Anglia and the Midlands. It is a lowland Unlikely
plant found on waste ground.
More likely
Soil type
Very likely
It grows on heavy clay soils.
Key features
Fruit: Winter wild-oat has a narrower lemma than
that of wild-oat and a shorter awn. The seeds are
joined in the spikelet and require pressure to prize
apart, leaving a scar.
Lookalikes
All oat species are difficult to tell apart at both
seedling and adult stages: winter wild-oat
germinates in the autumn whilst wild-oat usually
germinates in the spring. Wild-oat differs from
winter wild-oat in the following areas; leaf margins
are hairier near the base, spikelets are smaller,
lemmas are broader and end in two small teeth.
The two species are easier to tell apart when ripe,
wild-oat seeds separate from the spikelet
with no scar.
Biology
Wild-oat reproduces only by seed; it germinates in
autumn and persists over winter. One wild-oat plant
per square meter can reduce yields by up to 1t/ha
in winter cereals and up to 0.6t/ha in spring cereals.
Management
Control is cheaper in break crops; use of stale
seedbed in autumn or spring will help. Delay
cultivation after harvest to allow seed predation.
Hand roguing is possible when plants are visible
above the crop. Clean the combine between fields
to prevent seeds being spread.
203
Yorkshire-fog
Holcus lanatus
Competitive in
S O N D J F M A M J J A
Location
Geographic location
Yorkshire-fog occurs as seedling in
every type of habitat, with the greatest Not present
abundance in meadow and pasture. It Unlikely
can grow at altitudes of up to 600m. It
prefers damp sites, shady areas and More likely
low ground. In ditches it can become Very likely
dominant to the extent of excluding
other species.
Soil type
It grows in a wide range of weakly
acidic soils, preferring moist
conditions and high fertility, in the
pH range 5–7.
204
Description Scale: 1 space = 1mm
Key features
Young plant: There are red/pink strips at the base
of the shoots.
Biology
Yorkshire-fog is usually found only in or near field
margins. Established plants do not grow over
winter although the leaves may stay green. New
shoots are formed in the spring, but the leaves are
short-lived. Reproduction is usually by seed, which
can germinate rapidly in a range of temperatures.
Yorkshire-fog is a prolific seeder, with individual
plants capable of producing up to a quarter of a
million seeds each season. As the seed is small and
fine it can travel long distances carried by wind.
However, seedling vigour is poor and young plants
often fail to establish in dense pasture.
Management
It is seldom a persistent problem within crops and is
reduced by spring cropping and ploughing regimes,
but is encouraged by grass breaks.
205
Weed list by EPPO code
206
Weed list by EPPO code
207
Weed list by EPPO code
208
Weed list by EPPO code
209
Glossary
210
Glossary
Broad-leaved (Of plants) having leaves that are wider than they
are long broad-leaved weeds are contrasted with
grass weeds
Bulbous Swelling at the base of the stem, resembling a bulb
Canopy The parts of a plant, especially the leaves, that
receive light from the sun and shade the
ground beneath
Clasp (Of a usually stalkless leaf) to wrap around a stem
Clonal colony or A group of plants that are genetically identical and
clonal patch different from others growing around them
Compact (Of plants) having a neat growth habit /
(Of flowerheads) having the individual flowers tightly
packed together
Compacted (Of soil) compressed by the passage of vehicles
Competitiveness The ability of a plant to grow successfully in relation
to other plants around it. Competition between
weeds and crop plants can lead to yield reductions
Composite A plant that has flat flowers composed of florets
arranged around a central structure, for example a
daisy, dandelion or sunflower. Composites are
dicotyledons
Cotyledon A green structure resembling a leaf that appears as a
seed germinates, before the true leaves appear.
Monocotyledons are plants such as grasses that
have a single first seed leaf while the first leaves of
dicotyledons are in pairs. In broad-leaved plants, the
cotyledons are usually a different shape from the first
true leaves
Cross-fertile Fertilised by receiving pollen from another plant. See
also self-fertile
Dicotyledon A plant whose seed produces a pair of seed leaves
as it germinates. See also monocotyledon
Distribution The geographical area through-out which a plant
usually grows / The way in which the seeds of a plant
are spread
211
Glossary
212
Glossary
213
Glossary
214
Glossary
215
Glossary
216
Glossary
217
Index
218
Index
219
Index
220
Index
221
Further information
Available at ahdb.org.uk/knowledge-library
Please note this publication has been rebranded not revised, the
information was correct at the time of printing in 2008.