Ornamentals and Floriculture

Weed Management

Weeds compete for water, nutrients, and light, resulting in reduced flower yields and an increased threat of serious insect and disease problems. On this page, you’ll find information on weed management and control in ornamentals and floriculture, including poison hemlock, horseweed, carpetweed, mulberry weed, ragweed, and multiflora rose. Find tips on organic land care and weeds in the field.

Weeding in Floriculture

Controlling weeds is important – they can be unattractive, but more importantly, they compete with flowers and ornamentals for light, nutrients, and water. They can also harbor insects and increase issues with disease. But what makes a plant a weed? Many people define a weed as a plant that’s in the wrong position, or that interferes with the management objectives for a particular site or situation.

Keeping weeds under control is essential, not just for homeowners but for green industry professionals as well. It also plays a key role in organic land care best management practices and creating healthy landscapes.

Different floriculture practices require different weed management approaches. Weeds can be a big problem in greenhouses, both production and retail greenhouses. They grow underneath the benches and can be a host for pests and a reservoir for diseases. Managing weeds in cut flowers requires different approaches depending on the specific weed, flower, or woody stem, as well as the time of year and level of infestation.

Identifying and Managing Invasive Plants and Weeds

Weeds can be bothersome, but there are some species you should avoid at all costs. The Pennsylvania invasive plant list includes burning bush, privet, Japanese barberry, and the butterfly bush. Penn State Extension runs a workshop that will help you learn about the impact of invasive plants and how to identify and control them.

Some of the more common weeds include:

  • Japanese honeysuckle: This non-native climbing vine prefers full sun, although it can grow in shaded environments. Growth is aggressive and it will quickly climb over other desirable plant material.
  • Wild carrot or Queen Anne's lace: This biennial is not considered a weed by everyone, but if grown in landscape beds it may require control.
  • Jimsonweed (Datura stramonium): This annual plant is poisonous to animals and humans. If left undisturbed, it has the potential to be the tallest unwanted plant in a landscape bed, reaching more than 5 feet tall.
  • Multiflora rose: The State of Pennsylvania lists this as a “Class B” noxious weed. The dense monocultural thickets it creates degrade natural environments and reduce native plant and wildlife diversity.
  • Poison hemlock: It is poisonous to animals and humans and commonly found along roadsides, fields, and wet areas. It is very similar in appearance to wild carrot.
  • Mulberry weed: This summer annual can grow to more than 2 feet tall and will produce multiple, shorter stems when the crown is broken.
  • Ragweeds: These are members of the Aster family and are particularly resistant to herbicides.
  • Carpetweed: It is an annual that can be a weed issue in ornamental plant beds and in newly established or thinning turf.
  • Horseweed: Common in landscapes, nurseries, and agricultural settings, it is a prolific seed producer. One plant can produce more than 200,000 seeds that can be windblown up to a quarter of a mile.
  • English ivy: It is used extensively in landscapes as ground cover, but if left to grow unchecked it can climb into trees, cover the foliage, and kill the branches.

Herbicide Application for Flowers and Ornamentals

Weed control in floriculture is critical because maintaining the beauty of the flowers and ornamentals is important. Implementing a weed control plan is imperative, as it is much easier to prevent weed growth rather than kill existing weeds.

A common practice in floriculture is the application of herbicides. Most combination herbicides are formulated in two ways: amines or esters. Understanding the difference between the two and when to use them can increase the effectiveness of your weed control dramatically. Using the proper herbicide formulations also prevents damage to non-target plants. Herbicide drift and drift-related damage can be costly and there’s also the risk of a potential lawsuit. Spray recordkeeping is key when you apply herbicides or pesticides.

If you choose to apply or supervise the use of restricted-use pesticides, federal law and regulations state that you must be certified as a private or commercial applicator.

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  1. Professional Pest Managers School
    Workshops

    $125.00

    Professional Pest Managers School
    When 12/09/2024
    Length 7 hours, 15 minutes
    Event Format In-Person
    This one-day pesticide update session provides research-based information for applicators, as well as recertification credits in categories where it can be difficult to find credits.
  2. Catoctin Mountain Orchards using black plastic mulch and straw between rows.
    Articles
    Weed Control in Cut Flowers
    By Steve Bogash
    Managing weeds in cut flowers often requires different approaches depending on the specific weed, specific flower or woody stem, time of year and level of weed infestation.
  3. Creeping buttercup growing in a partially shaded lawn. Photo: Peter Landschoot, Penn State
    Articles
    Lawn and Turfgrass Weeds: Creeping Buttercup
    By Tim Abbey, Peter Landschoot, Ph.D., Tanner Delvalle
    Creeping buttercup is a stoloniferous plant that spreads through thin turf forming patches in lawns and parks.
  4. Photo: Loke T. Kok, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University, Bugwood.org, bull thistle, Cirsium vulgare
    Articles
    Bull Thistle Identification and Management
    By Tim Abbey
    Bull thistle (Cirsium vulgare) is a biennial that true to its name, has notable spines. This plant is much different than Canada thistle.
  5. Flowers of annual fleabane. Photo: Peter Landschoot, Penn State
    Articles
    Lawn and Turfgrass Weeds: Annual or Daisy Fleabane
    By Tim Abbey, Peter Landschoot, Ph.D., Tanner Delvalle
    Annual fleabane, also called daisy fleabane, is a common and fast-growing broadleaf weed found in Pennsylvania lawns and other low maintenance turf areas. Its common name comes from folklore claiming dried plant material will repel fleas.
  6. Phytotoxicity from the insecticide Spirotetramat on geraniums. Photo: Thomas G. Ford
    Articles
    Off-label Applications of Pesticides and Phytotoxicity
    By Thomas Ford
    Extension professionals and pesticide industry representatives consistently reminded growers to read the pesticide label thoroughly and observe all precautions listed on the label.
  7. Photo: James H. Miller & Ted Bodner, Southern Weed Science Society, Bugwood.org
    Articles
    Yellow Woodsorrel
    By Tim Abbey
    Yellow woodsorrel (Oxalis stricta) has foliage (composed of three leaflets) that resembles white clover or black medic.
  8. Photo: Ohio State Weed Lab Archive, The Ohio State University, Bugwood.org, wild garlic,Allium vineale
    Articles
    Wild Onion and Wild Garlic
    By Tim Abbey
    Wild garlic (Allium vineale) and onion (Allium canadense) are perennial plants that can be a weed in turfgrass and landscape beds.
  9. Photo: Mark Czarnota, University of Georgia, Bugwood.org
    Articles
    Mulberry Weed
    By Tim Abbey
    A weed that has been spreading in recent years in the nursery and landscape trade is mulberry weed.
  10. Patch of common field speedwell in park in Gettysburg. Photo: Peter Landschoot, Penn State
    Articles
    Lawn and Turfgrass Weeds: Common Field Speedwell (Veronica persica)
    By Tim Abbey, Peter Landschoot, Ph.D., Tanner Delvalle
    Common field speedwell is a common weed of home lawns, parks, institutional grounds, and golf courses in Pennsylvania.
  11. Veronicastrum virginicum - culver's root
    Articles
    Weeds in the Fields
    By Mary Ann Ryan
    When driving, we often see flowering weeds in fields or roadsides. Casual walks along a country road may cause us to stop and check out the weeds of summer.
  12. Photo: Ohio State Weed Lab Archive, The Ohio State University, Bugwood.org common purslane Portulaca oleracea
    Articles
    Purslane
    By Tim Abbey
    Purslane (Portulaca oleracea) is a summer annual that forms low growing mats of succulent stems and leaves.
  13. Photo: Rebekah D. Wallace, University of Georgia, Bugwood.org carpetweed Mollugo verticillata
    Articles
    Carpetweed
    By Tim Abbey
    Carpetweed (Mollugo verticillata) is a low-growing, multi-shoot annual that grows into a circular mat.
  14. Pinnately compound leaves with rounded leaflets. Photo: Peter Landschoot, Penn State
    Articles
    Lawn and Turfgrass Weeds: Hairy Bittercress
    By Tim Abbey, Peter Landschoot, Ph.D., Tanner Delvalle
    Hairy bittercress (Cardamine hirsuta L.) is one of the first broadleaf weeds to appear in home lawns, parks, and other turf areas during early spring.
  15. Photo: Ohio State Weed Lab, The Ohio State University, Bugwood.org common mallow (Malva neglecta)
    News
    Landscape Management: Common Mallow
    Date Posted 5/30/2018
    Considered a weed in turfgrass and landscape beds, common mallow is an interesting plant in that it can be an annual or biennial.
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