 |
 |
|
Crabgrass is a
summer annual that germinates when soil temperatures reach a consistent
55 degrees F and is generally killed at the first frost. Crabgrass
leaves are rolled in the bud; the first leaf appears short, wide and
blunt-tipped. The ligule is tall and membranous with jagged edges,
and the auricles are absent.
|
| The
collar is broad with long hairs. Crabgrass is light green in color,
coarse bladed and will root at the nodes when they touch the ground.
A single crabgrass plant can produce up to 700 tillers. It is a bunch
type grass. |
The inflorescence is
a panicle of branches, with spikelets in two rows. A crabgrass plant can
produce 150,000 seeds. Crabgrass needs warm soils and sunlight to germinate.
Crabgrass is found throughout
the United States.
Cultural Practices:
Do not seed,
core aerate or verticut when soil and weather conditions are appropriate
for the germination of crabgrass. A slightly raised mowing height may help
prevent the establishment of crabgrass by providing shade from sunlight.
When crabgrass is going to seed, lower the mowing height and collect clippings
to prevent seed establishment.
Herbicide Use:
Use a preemergent herbicide as soon as soil temperatures reach 55
degrees F for a period of four days. A preemergent herbicide is recommended
even if some crabgrass plants have germinated; there will still be crabgrass
seed in the soil which can prevent further infestation. Do not core aerate
or verticut after a preemergent herbicide application. For crabgrass control
after germination, use a postemergent selective grass herbicide.
University
Links | Gordon's
Recommendations | Germination
Dates
|