From be534480ff994aca22ea2ee528f9e30836e24b14 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Rich Braman Date: Tue, 17 Mar 2026 14:11:05 -0400 Subject: [PATCH] Add Czarnota weed control - November 2021 Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) --- .../activities/matching.md | 83 +++++ .../activities/quiz.md | 268 ++++++++++++++ .../archive-summary.md | 93 +++++ .../corrections.md | 234 +++++++++++++ .../2021-11-18-czarnota-weed-control/index.md | 43 +++ .../platforms/ext-agent.md | 89 +++++ .../platforms/website.md | 93 +++++ .../platforms/youtube.md | 56 +++ .../processing-log.md | 199 +++++++++++ .../prose-transcript.md | 331 ++++++++++++++++++ docs/green-commercial/index.md | 1 + mkdocs.yml | 15 + 12 files changed, 1505 insertions(+) create mode 100644 docs/green-commercial/2021-11-18-czarnota-weed-control/activities/matching.md create mode 100644 docs/green-commercial/2021-11-18-czarnota-weed-control/activities/quiz.md create mode 100644 docs/green-commercial/2021-11-18-czarnota-weed-control/archive-summary.md create mode 100644 docs/green-commercial/2021-11-18-czarnota-weed-control/corrections.md create mode 100644 docs/green-commercial/2021-11-18-czarnota-weed-control/index.md create mode 100644 docs/green-commercial/2021-11-18-czarnota-weed-control/platforms/ext-agent.md create mode 100644 docs/green-commercial/2021-11-18-czarnota-weed-control/platforms/website.md create mode 100644 docs/green-commercial/2021-11-18-czarnota-weed-control/platforms/youtube.md create mode 100644 docs/green-commercial/2021-11-18-czarnota-weed-control/processing-log.md create mode 100644 docs/green-commercial/2021-11-18-czarnota-weed-control/prose-transcript.md diff --git a/docs/green-commercial/2021-11-18-czarnota-weed-control/activities/matching.md b/docs/green-commercial/2021-11-18-czarnota-weed-control/activities/matching.md new file mode 100644 index 0000000..0335fd7 --- /dev/null +++ b/docs/green-commercial/2021-11-18-czarnota-weed-control/activities/matching.md @@ -0,0 +1,83 @@ +# GTBOP Moodle Matching Exercises +## Weed Control in the Landscape & Nursery — Dr. Mark Czarnota (November 18, 2021) + +**Source:** Corrected SRT (Stage 1) — GTBOP_Transcript_2021-11-18_WeedControl.srt (786 blocks) +**Structural Reference:** Stage 2 Archive Package — GTBOP_Archive_Summary_2021-11-18_WeedControl.md +**Exercises:** 3 +**Types:** Product-Ingredient, Timing-Practice, Species ID / Concept Matching + +--- + +### Matching Exercise 1: Herbicide Products and Their Active Ingredients +**Timestamp Reference:** 25:16 – 35:16 (primary coverage area) +**Type:** Product-Ingredient + +**Instructions:** Match each trade name in Column A with its active ingredient in Column B. + +| # | Column A | | Column B | +|---|----------|-|----------| +| 1 | Dimension | | a) isoxaben + trifluralin | +| 2 | Marengo | | b) dithiopyr | +| 3 | BroadStar | | c) clethodim | +| 4 | Snapshot | | d) flumioxazin | +| 5 | Envoy | | e) quinclorac | +| 6 | Drive | | f) indaziflam | +| 7 | Treflan | | g) halosulfuron | +| 8 | SedgeHammer | | h) trifluralin | + +**Answer Key:** +1 → b, 2 → f, 3 → d, 4 → a, 5 → c, 6 → e, 7 → h, 8 → g + +**Source in transcript:** Trade name/active ingredient pairings discussed across blocks 391–530 (pre-emergent and post-emergent product sections) and blocks 710–720 (Q&A on Drive/quinclorac) + +--- + +### Matching Exercise 2: Herbicide Application Timing and Practice +**Timestamp Reference:** 21:07 – 23:43 and 36:40 – 39:30 +**Type:** Timing-Practice + +**Instructions:** Match each herbicide application scenario in Column A with the correct practice or outcome described by Dr. Czarnota in Column B. + +| # | Column A | | Column B | +|---|----------|-|----------| +| 1 | Pre-emergent herbicide applied with no rain for two weeks | | a) Product is inactivated immediately upon soil contact | +| 2 | Post-emergent herbicide applied just before a rainstorm | | b) Reduced control; product needs 0.5–1 inch of rain within 72 hours to activate | +| 3 | Glyphosate sprayed onto bare soil | | c) Apply at 25–50% solution using a wick or sponge applicator | +| 4 | Glyphosate used for stump treatment | | d) Reduced effectiveness; product needs a dry period to be absorbed through leaves | +| 5 | Pre-emergent application in Georgia | | e) Apply at 50–100% solution, paint directly onto cut surface | +| 6 | Glyphosate applied by wicking onto target weeds | | f) Apply in January–February before spring weed germination | + +**Answer Key:** +1 → b, 2 → d, 3 → a, 4 → e, 5 → f, 6 → c + +**Source in transcript:** Pre-emergent/post-emergent timing discussed in blocks 352–385; glyphosate application rates and methods in blocks 640–680; Georgia timing recommendations in blocks 586–590 + +--- + +### Matching Exercise 3: Weed Control Methods and Their Targets +**Timestamp Reference:** 15:44 – 18:06 and 44:54 – 48:55 +**Type:** Species ID / Control Method + +**Instructions:** Match each weed problem or pest target in Column A with the control method or product recommended by Dr. Czarnota in Column B. + +| # | Column A | | Column B | +|---|----------|-|----------| +| 1 | Submerged aquatic weeds in a small pond | | a) Clethodim (Envoy) | +| 2 | Kudzu on a fenced area | | b) Thistle weevil larvae | +| 3 | Musk thistle seed production | | c) Drive (quinclorac) | +| 4 | Bermudagrass creeping into ornamental beds | | d) Atrazine (2 applications at 1 qt/acre) | +| 5 | Torpedograss in ornamental plantings | | e) Grass carp (8–10 per surface acre) | +| 6 | Virginia buttonweed in turfgrass | | f) Goats followed by herbicide on regrowth | +| 7 | Marchantia in propagation houses | | g) Sandea (halosulfuron) | +| 8 | Yellow nutsedge in landscape beds | | h) Reduce watering frequency; pre-emergent granulars | + +**Answer Key:** +1 → e, 2 → f, 3 → b, 4 → a, 5 → c, 6 → d, 7 → h, 8 → g + +**Source in transcript:** Biological controls in blocks 260–298; Marchantia in blocks 118–137; bermudagrass Q&A in blocks 740–762; torpedograss Q&A in blocks 710–720; Virginia buttonweed Q&A in blocks 722–738; nutsedge products in blocks 399–401 and 520–525 + +--- + +*Generated for UGA Center for Urban Agriculture / GTBOP Moodle Course Activities* +*Source: Corrected SRT (Stage 1) — GTBOP_Transcript_2021-11-18_WeedControl.srt (786 blocks)* +*Structural Reference: Stage 2 Archive Package* diff --git a/docs/green-commercial/2021-11-18-czarnota-weed-control/activities/quiz.md b/docs/green-commercial/2021-11-18-czarnota-weed-control/activities/quiz.md new file mode 100644 index 0000000..12dca62 --- /dev/null +++ b/docs/green-commercial/2021-11-18-czarnota-weed-control/activities/quiz.md @@ -0,0 +1,268 @@ +# GTBOP Moodle Quiz +## Weed Control in the Landscape & Nursery — Dr. Mark Czarnota (November 18, 2021) + +**Source:** Corrected SRT (Stage 1) — GTBOP_Transcript_2021-11-18_WeedControl.srt (786 blocks) +**Structural Reference:** Stage 2 Archive Package — GTBOP_Archive_Summary_2021-11-18_WeedControl.md +**Questions:** 15 +**Difficulty Distribution:** 6 Recall (40%) / 6 Application (40%) / 3 Analysis (20%) + +--- + +### Question 1 +**Timestamp Reference:** 4:28 – 5:06 +**Difficulty:** Recall + +Which of the following did Dr. Czarnota identify as one of the six characteristics that predict whether a plant is likely to become a weed? + +a) Tolerance to herbicide applications +b) Presence of a vegetative reproductive structure +c) Ability to grow in full shade +d) Resistance to insect feeding + +**Correct Answer:** b +**Explanation:** Czarnota listed six predictive characteristics of weediness, the first being the presence of a vegetative reproductive structure, using yellow and purple nutsedge as examples. +**Source in transcript:** ~4:28–5:06, blocks 98–114 + +--- + +### Question 2 +**Timestamp Reference:** 5:13 – 6:16 +**Difficulty:** Recall + +What weed did Dr. Czarnota describe as a problem in propagation houses growing azaleas, for which a promising fungicide-based control product ultimately failed to receive EPA registration? + +a) Chamberbitter +b) Purple nutsedge +c) Marchantia +d) Dogfennel + +**Correct Answer:** c +**Explanation:** Czarnota described Marchantia as a liverwort problem in greenhouse propagation of azaleas. A fungicide already labeled in Europe showed promise as a control but was rejected by EPA due to how the toxicology was written up. +**Source in transcript:** ~5:13–6:40, blocks 118–137 + +--- + +### Question 3 +**Timestamp Reference:** 14:48 – 15:36 +**Difficulty:** Application + +A landscape manager notices bare soil exposed between newly planted shrubs after mulch has decomposed. Based on Dr. Czarnota's recommendations, what is the most appropriate first response? + +a) Apply a post-emergent herbicide to the bare soil +b) Restore the mulch layer to two to four inches +c) Install landscape fabric over the bare soil +d) Apply a pre-emergent herbicide at double the label rate + +**Correct Answer:** b +**Explanation:** Czarnota repeatedly emphasized that bare soil will always produce weed growth, and recommended maintaining a two-to-four-inch layer of composted organic mulch, refreshed once or twice per year. +**Source in transcript:** ~15:01–15:36, blocks 251–256 + +--- + +### Question 4 +**Timestamp Reference:** 15:44 – 16:07 +**Difficulty:** Recall + +According to Dr. Czarnota, how many grass carp per surface acre are recommended for controlling submerged aquatic weeds in a small pond? + +a) 2–4 +b) 8–10 +c) 15–20 +d) 25–30 + +**Correct Answer:** b +**Explanation:** Czarnota recommended stocking about 8 to 10 grass carp per surface acre for effective control of submerged aquatic weeds in small ponds. +**Source in transcript:** ~16:00–16:07, blocks 260–261 + +--- + +### Question 5 +**Timestamp Reference:** 17:00 – 18:06 +**Difficulty:** Application + +A pasture manager has a large infestation of musk thistle and wants to reduce its spread over two to three years without relying heavily on herbicides. Based on Dr. Czarnota's presentation, which biological control approach would be most appropriate? + +a) Release grass carp into nearby water features +b) Introduce geese to graze the thistle +c) Release thistle weevil eggs around the thistle plants +d) Apply the bioherbicide DeVine to the thistle + +**Correct Answer:** c +**Explanation:** Czarnota described the thistle weevil as a successful biocontrol agent for musk thistle. The weevil larvae feed on developing seed heads, preventing reproduction and reducing populations over a two-to-three-year period. DeVine was developed for strangler vine in citrus, not thistle. +**Source in transcript:** ~17:29–18:06, blocks 287–298 + +--- + +### Question 6 +**Timestamp Reference:** 21:07 – 22:00 +**Difficulty:** Application + +A landscaper applies a pre-emergent herbicide in late February in Georgia but receives no rain for the following two weeks. What is the most likely outcome? + +a) The herbicide will still provide full-season weed control +b) The herbicide will not be activated and weed control will be significantly reduced +c) The herbicide will become toxic to nearby ornamentals +d) The herbicide will leach below the root zone + +**Correct Answer:** b +**Explanation:** Czarnota explained that pre-emergent herbicides need a rain event of about a half inch to one inch to move the product into the top quarter inch of soil where seeds germinate. He later noted that if no rain occurs within 72 hours, weed control starts to diminish. +**Source in transcript:** ~21:19–21:55 and ~38:55–39:07, blocks 352–356 and 607–609 + +--- + +### Question 7 +**Timestamp Reference:** 22:18 – 22:40 +**Difficulty:** Recall + +What happens to glyphosate when it contacts bare soil, according to Dr. Czarnota? + +a) It remains active in the soil for up to 12 weeks +b) It is absorbed by the soil particles and inactivated immediately +c) It leaches into groundwater within 24 hours +d) It continues to provide pre-emergent weed control + +**Correct Answer:** b +**Explanation:** Czarnota stated that when glyphosate is sprayed on the ground, it is inactivated immediately because it bonds to soil particles and eventually breaks down into carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen. +**Source in transcript:** ~22:20–22:45, blocks 372–374 + +--- + +### Question 8 +**Timestamp Reference:** 26:36 – 27:04 +**Difficulty:** Analysis + +Dr. Czarnota explained that glyphosate inhibits the EPSP synthase pathway, which produces three amino acids: tryptophan, phenylalanine, and tyrosine. Why does this mode of action contribute to glyphosate's low mammalian toxicity? + +a) These amino acids are not essential for human health +b) Mammals have a backup pathway that produces these amino acids +c) The EPSP synthase pathway does not exist in humans or any animals +d) Glyphosate breaks down before it can reach mammalian cells + +**Correct Answer:** c +**Explanation:** Czarnota emphasized that no animals have the EPSP synthase pathway — humans must obtain tryptophan, phenylalanine, and tyrosine through their diet. Because glyphosate targets a pathway absent from animal biology, it is one of the reasons for its low toxicity to mammals. +**Source in transcript:** ~26:36–27:04, blocks 444–451 + +--- + +### Question 9 +**Timestamp Reference:** 28:22 – 29:08 +**Difficulty:** Recall + +According to Dr. Czarnota, what is the mode of action of dinitroaniline herbicides such as Treflan, pendimethalin, and Barricade? + +a) Inhibition of photosynthesis +b) Disruption of cell membrane integrity +c) Disruption of microtubule formation during cell division +d) Inhibition of amino acid production + +**Correct Answer:** c +**Explanation:** Czarnota explained that dinitroaniline herbicides bind to microtubules, the structures that pull chromosomes apart during cell division. This prevents cells from dividing properly and laying down a new cell plate, resulting in club-rooted growth symptoms. +**Source in transcript:** ~28:22–29:08, blocks 468–476 + +--- + +### Question 10 +**Timestamp Reference:** 29:42 – 30:50 +**Difficulty:** Application + +A landscape professional needs a pre-emergent herbicide that is safe for use on most turfgrasses, broad woody ornamentals, and some perennials and annuals. Which product did Dr. Czarnota describe as significantly underutilized for this purpose? + +a) Marengo (indaziflam) +b) Snapshot (isoxaben + trifluralin) +c) Dimension (dithiopyr) +d) BroadStar (flumioxazin) + +**Correct Answer:** c +**Explanation:** Czarnota specifically called Dimension (dithiopyr) one of the most underutilized pre-emergent herbicides and noted it can be safely sprayed in most turfgrasses and landscape situations including broad woody ornamentals and even some perennials and annuals. +**Source in transcript:** ~29:54–30:28, blocks 491–497 + +--- + +### Question 11 +**Timestamp Reference:** 30:40 – 31:07 +**Difficulty:** Recall + +How many weeks of pre-emergent weed control did Dr. Czarnota say Marengo (indaziflam) can provide in established woody ornamentals? + +a) 6–8 weeks +b) 8–10 weeks +c) 10–12 weeks +d) Up to 16 weeks + +**Correct Answer:** d +**Explanation:** Czarnota described Marengo (indaziflam) as one of the best products he had tested, providing upwards of 16 weeks of pre-emergent weed control, though mainly for established woody ornamentals. He noted it would not control nutsedge. +**Source in transcript:** ~30:43–31:04, blocks 501–504 + +--- + +### Question 12 +**Timestamp Reference:** 36:15 – 36:39 +**Difficulty:** Analysis + +Dr. Czarnota compared the cost of hand weeding an acre of one-gallon container ornamentals ($1,200–$1,600) to the cost of chemical weed control (less than $200). Based on the application frequency he recommended for container production, what is the approximate annual cost range for chemical weed control per acre? + +a) Less than $200 total +b) $400–$600 +c) $800–$1,200 +d) $1,200–$1,600 + +**Correct Answer:** c +**Explanation:** Czarnota stated chemical weed control costs less than $200 per application and recommended four to six applications per year for container production. At $200 per application times four to six applications, the annual cost would be approximately $800–$1,200 per acre. +**Source in transcript:** ~36:19–36:39 and 38:40–38:45, blocks 572–575 and 602–604 + +--- + +### Question 13 +**Timestamp Reference:** 37:52 – 38:06 +**Difficulty:** Application + +A nursery grower is using a granular pre-emergent herbicide on container ornamentals. Why might the granular formulation be preferable to a sprayable formulation in this situation, according to Dr. Czarnota? + +a) Granulars are always cheaper than sprayable formulations +b) Granulars fall through the plant canopy to the ground, reducing contact with foliage +c) Granulars provide longer residual control than sprays +d) Granulars do not require activation by rainfall + +**Correct Answer:** b +**Explanation:** Czarnota explained that granular formulations fall through the plant canopy to hit the ground, then release herbicide when rain occurs. Sprays contact the plant foliage directly, increasing the risk of damage. However, he noted granulars are more expensive per unit of active ingredient and provide somewhat poorer weed control than sprays. +**Source in transcript:** ~37:52–38:06, blocks 595–598 + +--- + +### Question 14 +**Timestamp Reference:** 45:12 – 45:55 +**Difficulty:** Application + +A grower asks about controlling torpedograss in an ornamental planting. Based on Dr. Czarnota's response, which product did he recommend, and what important limitation did he note? + +a) Glyphosate — it is non-selective and will damage ornamentals +b) Sandea (halosulfuron) — it only controls nutsedge species, not grasses +c) Drive (quinclorac) — it is not yet labeled for over-top use on ornamentals +d) Clethodim (Envoy) — it only suppresses bermudagrass, not torpedograss + +**Correct Answer:** c +**Explanation:** Czarnota recommended Drive (quinclorac) as very effective on torpedograss and noted his university research showed it to be fairly safe on most woody ornamentals. However, he cautioned that it is not yet labeled for over-top ornamental use, so it would not be a labeled application. +**Source in transcript:** ~45:12–45:55, blocks 710–720 + +--- + +### Question 15 +**Timestamp Reference:** 27:18 – 27:43 +**Difficulty:** Analysis + +Dr. Czarnota described the NIH shift as one mechanism by which grasses detoxify 2,4-D. What does this tell us about why 2,4-D can be used as a selective herbicide in grass crops? + +a) Grasses absorb 2,4-D more slowly than broadleaf plants +b) Grasses have enzyme systems that chemically modify the 2,4-D molecule, inactivating it +c) 2,4-D only penetrates broadleaf plant cuticles, not grass cuticles +d) Grasses store 2,4-D in their roots where it cannot cause harm + +**Correct Answer:** b +**Explanation:** Czarnota explained that grasses have an enzyme system (the NIH shift) that can change the position of chlorine groups on the 2,4-D molecule, effectively inactivating it. This biochemical detoxification mechanism is one of the ways grasses tolerate 2,4-D, making it useful as a selective broadleaf herbicide in grass crops. +**Source in transcript:** ~27:18–27:43, blocks 453–459 + +--- + +*Generated for UGA Center for Urban Agriculture / GTBOP Moodle Course Activities* +*Source: Corrected SRT (Stage 1) — GTBOP_Transcript_2021-11-18_WeedControl.srt (786 blocks)* +*Structural Reference: Stage 2 Archive Package* diff --git a/docs/green-commercial/2021-11-18-czarnota-weed-control/archive-summary.md b/docs/green-commercial/2021-11-18-czarnota-weed-control/archive-summary.md new file mode 100644 index 0000000..5782626 --- /dev/null +++ b/docs/green-commercial/2021-11-18-czarnota-weed-control/archive-summary.md @@ -0,0 +1,93 @@ +# GTBOP Webinar Archive Summary +## Weed Control in the Landscape & Nursery + +**Webinar Date:** November 18, 2021 +**Speaker:** Dr. Mark Czarnota, Associate Professor of Horticulture (Weed Science), University of Georgia Griffin Campus +**Moderator:** Dr. Shimat Joseph, Turfgrass Entomologist, UGA Griffin Campus +**Duration:** 50:05 +**Series:** Green & Commercial +**CEU Categories:** Category 10 (Private Applicator), Category 21 (Plant Agriculture), Category 22 (Animal Agriculture), Category 23 (Forestry), Category 24 (Ornamental and Turf Pest Control), Category 27 (Right-of-Way Pest Control), Category 31 (Public Health Pest Control), Category 32 (Regulatory Pest Control), Category 35 (Industrial, Institutional, Structural and Health Related) + +--- + +## NARRATIVE SUMMARY + +Dr. Mark Czarnota, a weed scientist at the University of Georgia Griffin Campus with expertise in ornamental, nursery, small fruit, and Christmas tree weed management, presented a comprehensive overview of weed control strategies for landscape and nursery professionals. Drawing on his background in weed science from Virginia Tech and Cornell University and his experience in the commercial nursery and chemical industries, Czarnota organized his talk around three primary control approaches: physical removal, physical barriers, and chemical weed control. + +Czarnota began by defining weeds and outlining six characteristics that predict whether a plant will become problematic, including vegetative reproductive structures, abundant seed production, rapid population establishment, seed dormancy, adaptive reproduction, and ability to colonize disturbed sites. He illustrated real-world challenges using examples of Marchantia (*Marchantia* spp.) infesting propagation houses, purple nutsedge (*Cyperus rotundus*) penetrating plastic mulch in blackberry plantings, and weeds emerging from container weep holes — situations where chemical options remain limited. + +The presentation covered physical control methods including tillage, flame weeding, and emerging automated weeding technology, as well as physical barriers such as landscape fabrics and mulches. Czarnota emphasized maintaining a two-to-four-inch mulch layer and noted that bare soil will always produce weed growth. He discussed biological control successes including grass carp for aquatic weed management, goats for kudzu suppression, and the thistle weevil for musk thistle control, along with the bioherbicide DeVine for strangler vine in citrus. + +The bulk of the presentation focused on chemical weed control, covering the distinction between pre-emergent and post-emergent herbicides, selective versus non-selective products, and granular versus sprayable formulations. Czarnota highlighted underutilized products including Dimension (dithiopyr) and Marengo (indaziflam), which can provide up to 16 weeks of pre-emergent control in established woody ornamentals. He reviewed modes of action for key herbicides including glyphosate's inhibition of the EPSP synthase pathway and the dinitroaniline herbicides' disruption of microtubule formation. Czarnota also discussed glyphosate safety, citing a 2017 Journal of the National Cancer Institute study of nearly 45,000 licensed applicators finding no association between glyphosate use and cancer incidence above national background rates. The session concluded with audience questions on torpedograss control using Drive (quinclorac), Virginia buttonweed management with atrazine, and selective bermudagrass control in ornamentals using clethodim (Envoy). + +--- + +## YOUTUBE TIMESTAMPS + +0:00 Introduction and Speaker Background +3:02 What Is a Weed? Definitions and Weediness Predictors +5:13 Challenging Weed Problems in Nursery Production +9:03 Weed Identification and Plant Life Cycles +11:55 Weed Control Methods: Physical Removal and Barriers +15:44 Biological Control: Grass Carp, Goats, Thistle Weevil +19:50 Chemical Weed Control: Impact of Major Herbicides +21:07 Pre-Emergent vs. Post-Emergent Herbicides +25:16 Trade Names, Active Ingredients, and Cost Savings +26:20 Herbicide Modes of Action +29:42 Pre-Emergent Herbicides for Landscape and Nursery +31:17 Post-Emergent and Combination Herbicides +35:16 Recommended Products: Marengo, BroadStar, SureGuard +36:40 Best Practices and Common Application Errors +40:21 Herbicide Fate, Organic Options, and Glyphosate Safety +43:40 Glyphosate Damage, Adjuvants, and Future Technologies +44:54 Q&A: Torpedograss, Virginia Buttonweed, Bermudagrass Control + +--- + +## QUESTIONS & ANSWERS + +**Q: What are the most important characteristics that make a plant likely to become a weed problem?** +A: According to Czarnota, six characteristics consistently predict weediness: the presence of a vegetative reproductive structure (like nutsedge tubers), abundant seed production (pigweed can produce 5,000–10,000 seeds per plant), rapid population establishment, seed dormancy allowing long-term survival in soil, the ability to reproduce both vegetatively and by seed, and the capacity to colonize disturbed sites. + +**Q: Why is maintaining a mulch layer so important for weed management in landscape beds?** +A: Czarnota emphasized that bare soil will always produce weed growth. A two-to-four-inch layer of composted organic mulch prevents weed seed germination, maintains soil temperature and moisture, and adds organic matter. This layer should be refreshed once or twice per year. Organic mulch should be composted and contain less than 10% white wood to avoid nitrogen tie-up. + +**Q: What is the difference between pre-emergent and post-emergent herbicides?** +A: Pre-emergent herbicides are applied to bare soil or mulch before weed seeds germinate. They need a rain event of about half an inch to one inch to move into the top quarter inch of soil where seeds germinate, and they provide roughly 8–12 weeks of control. Post-emergent herbicides are applied after weeds have emerged and need a period of dryness after application to be absorbed into the plant. + +**Q: Which pre-emergent herbicides does Czarnota recommend most for landscape use?** +A: Czarnota highlighted Dimension (dithiopyr) as one of the most underutilized pre-emergent herbicides, safe for use on most turfgrasses and landscape situations including broad woody ornamentals and some perennials and annuals. He also recommended Marengo (indaziflam) as one of the best products he has tested, providing up to 16 weeks of weed control in established woody ornamentals, though it does not control nutsedge. BroadStar (flumioxazin) as a granular and SureGuard as its sprayable form were also recommended. + +**Q: Why is glyphosate considered to have low toxicity to humans and animals?** +A: Glyphosate inhibits the EPSP synthase pathway, which produces three amino acids — tryptophan, phenylalanine, and tyrosine. This pathway does not exist in humans or any animals; we must obtain these amino acids through our diet. Because glyphosate targets a biochemical process absent from animal biology, it is one of the reasons the herbicide has low mammalian toxicity. Czarnota also cited a 2017 study from the Journal of the National Cancer Institute reviewing nearly 45,000 licensed applicators that found no association between glyphosate use and cancer above background rates. + +**Q: What are the advantages and disadvantages of granular versus sprayable herbicide formulations?** +A: Granular formulations fall through the plant canopy to the ground, making them safer for desirable plants, but they are more expensive per unit of active ingredient — most granulars are only about 2% active ingredient. Sprayable formulations are cheaper because the concentrate can be up to 90% active, but they contact plant foliage directly, increasing the risk of damage. Combination granular products like Snapshot and FreeHand offer both pre-emergent control and some burndown activity from oxyfluorfen. + +**Q: How should glyphosate be applied to avoid damaging desirable plants?** +A: Czarnota advised spraying glyphosate only on actively growing plant material, never applying it to the trunk or base of thin-barked trees, and ensuring the application dries before rain. He noted that repeated applications near ornamentals can cause "bud blasting" — sublethal damage where plants emerge with distorted growth. For stump control or selective removal, glyphosate or triclopyr can be painted directly onto cut stumps, which kills the plant about 90% of the time without affecting surrounding plants. + +**Q: What product works best for controlling torpedograss?** +A: Czarnota recommended Drive (quinclorac) as a product that controls torpedograss very well. He noted that Drive is not yet labeled for over-top use on ornamentals but has been used in blueberry and blackberry weed control. His university research has found it to be fairly safe on most woody ornamentals, though he cautioned it would not be a labeled application and recommended growers conduct their own trials. + +**Q: How can bermudagrass creeping into ornamental beds be selectively controlled?** +A: Czarnota recommended clethodim (Envoy) as the product giving approximately 10–15% better activity than alternatives, providing three to four months of bermudagrass suppression before retreatment is needed. Other effective grass herbicides include Segment, Fusilade DX (also sold as Grass-B-Gon), though all perform similarly. He noted that glyphosate also controls bermudagrass well at high rates but cannot be used selectively — it would kill both the bermudagrass and any desirable plants. + +**Q: What common mistakes reduce the effectiveness of herbicide applications?** +A: Czarnota listed several frequent errors: failing to irrigate after pre-emergent applications (they need rain within 72 hours), getting rain too soon after post-emergent applications, poorly calibrated equipment, poor herbicide selection for the target weed, and applying pre-emergent herbicides after weeds have already germinated. He recommended two to four applications per year for field situations and four to six for container production, using at least two different products to broaden the spectrum of control. + +**Q: What biological control methods have proven effective for weed management?** +A: Czarnota described several successful biocontrol examples. Grass carp stocked at 8–10 fish per surface acre effectively control submerged aquatic weeds. Goats can rapidly clear kudzu — in a demonstration at UGA's ag forestry field day, goats cleared a fenced kudzu area overnight, after which the site could be treated with herbicides on the regrowth. The thistle weevil successfully reduced musk thistle over a two-to-three-year period by larvae feeding on developing seeds, preventing reproduction. The bioherbicide DeVine, developed with the University of Florida, effectively controlled strangler vine in citrus. + +--- + +## ADDITIONAL RESOURCES + +- **Speaker Contact:** Dr. Mark Czarnota offered to answer additional questions via email (to be distributed to attendees) +- **Label and SDS Resources:** CDMS.net — contains approximately 80% of pesticide labels and safety data sheets +- **Turfgrass Weed Control Referral:** Dr. Patrick McCullough, UGA, for turfgrass-specific weed control questions (referenced during Virginia buttonweed discussion) + +--- + +*Processed for UGA Center for Urban Agriculture / GTBOP Archives* +*Source: Corrected SRT (Stage 1) — GTBOP_Transcript_2021-11-18_WeedControl.srt (786 blocks)* diff --git a/docs/green-commercial/2021-11-18-czarnota-weed-control/corrections.md b/docs/green-commercial/2021-11-18-czarnota-weed-control/corrections.md new file mode 100644 index 0000000..cb9778e --- /dev/null +++ b/docs/green-commercial/2021-11-18-czarnota-weed-control/corrections.md @@ -0,0 +1,234 @@ +# SRT Transcript Correction Summary +## File: Weed Control in the Landscape & Nursery with Dr. Mark Czarnota + +**Date Corrected:** March 1, 2026 +**Webinar Date:** November 18, 2021 +**Series:** Green & Commercial +**Topic:** Weed Science — Landscape and Nursery Weed Control +**Speaker:** Dr. Mark Czarnota, Associate Professor of Horticulture, University of Georgia Griffin Campus +**Moderator:** Dr. Shimat Joseph, Turfgrass Entomologist, UGA Griffin Campus + +--- + +## SOURCE VERIFICATION +- **Original blocks:** 786 +- **Corrected blocks:** 786 ✓ MATCH CONFIRMED +- **Time range:** 00:00:00,020 → 00:50:05,859 +- **Runtime:** ~50 minutes +- **File reading:** COMPLETE ✓ +- **Coverage proof:** + - Early [~4:30]: Six characteristics predicting weediness — vegetative reproduction, abundant seed production, rapid population establishment, seed dormancy, adaptive traits, disturbed site occupation + - Middle [~26:00]: Trade names vs. active ingredients discussion using glyphosate/Roundup as example; cost savings from identifying active ingredients after patent expiration + - Late [~47:00]: Q&A on Virginia buttonweed control — atrazine recommended for turfgrass; refers audience to Dr. Patrick McCullough for turfgrass weed control + +--- + +## Corrections Applied + +### Proper Nouns — Speaker Names +- "Mark Zermota" → "Mark Czarnota" (Blocks 3, 5) +- "Dr. Zornetta" → "Dr. Czarnota" (Block 10) +- "Shemette" → "Shimat" (Block 43) +- "Shemak" → "Shimat" (Block 770) + +### Institutions and Employers +- "the pond at their chemical company" → "the DuPont chemical company" (Block 49) +- "CDMSF.net" → "CDMS.net" (Block 620) +- "hopefully AMD is" → "hopefully AMVAC is" (Block 552) +- "the exhibition today" → "the presentation today" (Block 777) + +### Grass Species Names (Standardized Compounds) +- "Bermuda grass" / "bermuda grass" → "bermudagrass" (Blocks 193, 740, 744–762 Q&A section, multiple occurrences) +- "turf grass" → "turfgrass" (Blocks 571, 714, multiple occurrences) +- "nut sedge" / "nut, Sedge" → "nutsedge" (Blocks 99, 144–152, 169–184, 399–401, 520–525, multiple occurrences) +- "torpedo grass" → "torpedograss" (Blocks 703–721) +- "dog fennel" → "dogfennel" (Block 196) +- "burbadoe grass" → "bermudagrass" (Block 743) +- "zoysars" → "zoysia" (Block 740) + +### Chemical/Product Names +- "trifluorin" → "trifluralin" (Block 393) +- "penimethylene" → "pendimethalin" (Block 468) +- "benafin" → "benefin" (Block 468) +- "surfland" / "surf land" / "Surflat" → "Surflan" (Blocks 488–489, 552, 557, 566, 684–685, multiple) +- "Flumeox" → "flumioxazin" (Block 498) +- "Shureguard" / "Shoreguard" / "shoreguard" → "SureGuard" (Blocks 499, 561, 566) +- "Spectacle" → "Specticle" (Block 501) +- "Daziflam" → "indaziflam" (Block 501) +- "isoxamil" → "isoxaben" (Block 505) +- "oxyphorfen" → "oxyfluorfen" (Block 536) +- "tenamethylin" → "pendimethalin" (Block 538) +- "riseline" → "oryzalin" (Block 550) +- "Sandia" → "Sandea" (Blocks 150, 185) +- "Best Grant" → "Basagran" (Block 151) +- "massagranet image" → "Basagran and Image" (Block 524) +- "Garland is utilized" → "Garlon is utilized" (Block 529) +- "brush be gone" → "Brush-B-Gon" (Block 530) +- "SIFE" → "Scythe" (Block 511) +- "Glacisate" → "Glyphosate" (Block 630) +- "glufosinite" → "glufosinate" (Block 635) +- "Clefidin" → "clethodim" (Block 757) +- "Quinkler Act, you would have been known" → "quinclorac, you would have known" (Block 716) +- "revolver or matter or monument" → "Revolver or Manor or Monument" (Block 727) +- "D-vine" → "DeVine" (Block 270) +- "CDGAT" → "acetic acid" (Block 638 — confirmed by audio check; context: organic burndown products) +- "sedge hammer" → "SedgeHammer" (Block 150) +- "Sedgehammer" → "SedgeHammer" (Blocks 399, 524) +- "Presedge" → "ProSedge" (Block 524) +- "Pennant Magnum" — capitalized (Block 557) +- "Barricade" — capitalized (Block 566) +- "Pendulum" — capitalized (Block 566) +- "Gallery" — capitalized (Blocks 557, 566) +- "Preen" — capitalized (Block 391) +- "Dimension" — capitalized (Blocks 491, 588) +- "Snapshot" — capitalized (Blocks 542, 548, 562) +- "FreeHanded" → "FreeHand" (Block 548) +- "freehand" → "FreeHand" (Block 549) +- "treflator very good" → "Treflan are very good" (Block 549) +- "Snapshot Freehand" → "Snapshot, FreeHand" (Block 562 — two separate products) +- "pregnant mulchins" → "pre-treated mulches" (Block 684) + +### Scientific/Technical Terms +- "Marchantia" ← "mercantia" / "more canthia" (Blocks 118, related context) +- "Phyllanthus species" ← "philanthropist species" (Block 172) +- "dinitroaniline" ← "dinitrietylene" (Block 465) +- "microtubule" ← "microtubial" (Block 469) +- "hypocotyl" ← "hypocaudal" (Block 380) +- "radicle" ← "radical" (Blocks 381, 382) +- "ploidy numbers" ← "fluidity numbers" (Blocks 479, 481) +- "phloem-loaded" ← "full loaded" (Block 366) +- "systemic" ← "static" (Block 512) +- "canopy over" ← "catapy over" (Block 384) +- "ornamental industry" ← "ore metal industry" (Block 478) +- "ornamentals" ← "water metals" (Block 571) +- "crape myrtles" ← "grape minerals" (Blocks 667, 672) +- "broad woody ornamentals" ← "bro woody or metals" (Block 494) +- "shallow-rooted" ← "shallow-youted root" (Block 210) +- "stump control" ← "stomp control" (Block 677) +- "half-lives" ← "half-lice" (Block 631) +- "kudzu" ← "kundzu" (Block 280) +- "cattle" ← "cats" (Block 326) +- "triclopyr" ← "tranquil beer" (Block 680) + +### Weed Science Terminology +- "weed science" ← "wheat science" (Block 87) +- "weed problems" ← "wheat problems" (Block 181) +- "emerged weed" / "emergent weeds" ← "emerged wheat" (Block 262) +- "post-emergent" ← "post-abargin" (Blocks 510–511) +- "burn down emerged grasses" ← "brown and merge grasses" (Block 515) +- "broad-spectrum weed control" ← "row spectrum weight control" (Block 557) +- "tank mix it" ← "tag my sense" (Block 557) + +--- + +## Flagged Items — Resolved via Audio Verification + +All items below were flagged during initial correction and resolved by audio review: + +| Block | Original (Whisper) | Correction | Resolution | +|-------|-------------------|------------|------------| +| 62 | "wild years" | "why I'm here" | Audio confirmed | +| 120 | "salient plant" | "azalea plant" | Audio confirmed | +| 141 | "or a board or glyphosate" | "glufosinate or Reward or glyphosate" | Audio confirmed — full line reordered | +| 173 | "maroism" | "if you're familiar with them" | Audio confirmed — conversational filler, not a term | +| 219 | "Banville" | "they have all" | Audio confirmed | +| 294 | "Renac are really caused" | "prevent a seed or really cause" | Audio confirmed | +| 479 | "As I saw some in a trough land" | "as isoxaben and trifluralin" | Audio confirmed — Snapshot active ingredients | +| 506 | "Penic" | "Pennant" | Audio confirmed (metolachlor product) | +| 557 | "Sam Ziner" | "Simazine" | Audio confirmed (triazine herbicide) | +| 570 | "sable pond" | "sabal palm" | Audio confirmed | +| 634 | "Post herbicides about five" | No change needed | Audio verified as correct | +| 638 | "CDGAT" | "acetic acid" | Audio confirmed | +| 684 | "pregnant mulchins" / "pre-treated mulches" | "impregnated mulches" | Audio confirmed | +| 760 | "already methanced" | [laughing] | Audio confirmed — laughter misheard as words | + +--- + +## SRT Format Compliance +✅ All timestamps preserved exactly as original +✅ All sequence numbers maintained (1–786) +✅ Blank lines between segments preserved +✅ Maximum 2 lines per subtitle segment maintained +✅ No segments merged or split +✅ Block count: 786 original = 786 corrected ✓ + +--- + +## New Correction Patterns for Common Corrections Reference + +### Speaker Names +| Whisper Output | Correct Form | +|----------------|-------------| +| Zermota / Zornetta | Czarnota | + +### Chemical/Product Names — Green & Commercial (Weed Science) +| Whisper Output | Correct Form | +|----------------|-------------| +| penimethylene | pendimethalin | +| benafin | benefin | +| Flumeox | flumioxazin | +| Shureguard / Shoreguard | SureGuard | +| Daziflam | indaziflam | +| isoxamil | isoxaben | +| oxyphorfen | oxyfluorfen | +| riseline | oryzalin | +| Sandia | Sandea | +| Best Grant | Basagran | +| Clefidin | clethodim | +| Quinkler Act | quinclorac | +| Glacisate | Glyphosate | +| glufosinite | glufosinate | +| tranquil beer | triclopyr | +| D-vine | DeVine | +| Surflat / surfland | Surflan | +| treflator | Treflan | +| pregnant mulchins | impregnated mulches | +| CDGAT | acetic acid | +| Penic | Pennant | +| Sam Ziner | Simazine | +| sable pond | sabal palm | + +### Technical Terms — Weed Science +| Whisper Output | Correct Form | +|----------------|-------------| +| hypocaudal | hypocotyl | +| radical (seed structure) | radicle | +| microtubial | microtubule | +| fluidity numbers | ploidy numbers | +| full loaded (herbicide) | phloem-loaded | +| catapy over | canopy over | +| dinitrietylene | dinitroaniline | +| post-abargin | post-emergent | +| row spectrum weight | broad-spectrum weed | +| tag my sense | tank mix it | +| salient plant | azalea plant | +| Renac are really caused | prevent a seed or really cause | +| As I saw some in a trough land | as isoxaben and trifluralin | + +### Other +| Whisper Output | Correct Form | +|----------------|-------------| +| grape minerals | crape myrtles | +| water metals / ore metals / bro woody or metals | ornamentals / broad woody ornamentals | +| cats (livestock) | cattle | + +--- + +## Notes + +**Overall Transcript Quality:** Moderate to poor. Whisper struggled significantly with weed science terminology, herbicide product names, and chemical names throughout. The speaker's natural conversational pace and occasional garbled audio (satellite internet connection) compounded recognition errors. Technical sections (~20:00–36:00) contain the highest density of corrections. + +**Dominant Error Patterns:** +1. Chemical/product name garbling — Whisper consistently phonetized herbicide names into unrelated English words ("penimethylene," "Glacisate," "glufosinite," "tranquil beer") +2. "Ornamental" consistently garbled — appeared as "ore metal," "water metals," "grape minerals," "bro woody or metals" +3. Botanical/technical terms rendered phonetically — "hypocotyl" → "hypocaudal," "radicle" → "radical," "dinitroaniline" → "dinitrietylene" +4. Speaker name inconsistency — Whisper rendered "Czarnota" differently in each introduction block + +**Speaker Roster:** Dr. Mark Czarnota is not currently in the project speaker roster. Recommend adding: +- Dr. Mark Czarnota | Associate Professor of Horticulture (Weed Science), UGA Griffin Campus + +--- + +**Total Corrections:** ~95 individual corrections across ~65 unique error patterns +**Flagged Items:** 14 flagged, all resolved via audio verification +**Processing:** Complete file (786 subtitle blocks, 3144 lines) diff --git a/docs/green-commercial/2021-11-18-czarnota-weed-control/index.md b/docs/green-commercial/2021-11-18-czarnota-weed-control/index.md new file mode 100644 index 0000000..5d22794 --- /dev/null +++ b/docs/green-commercial/2021-11-18-czarnota-weed-control/index.md @@ -0,0 +1,43 @@ +--- +tags: + - Green & Commercial + - Weed Science + - Czarnota +--- + +# Weed Control in the Landscape & Nursery +## GTBOP Green & Commercial — November 18, 2021 + +**Speaker:** Dr. Mark Czarnota, Associate Professor of Horticulture, UGA Griffin Campus +**Moderator:** Dr. Shimat Joseph, Turfgrass Entomologist, UGA +**Duration:** 50:05 +**CEU Categories:** Category 10 (Private), 21 (Plant Ag), 22 (Animal Ag), 23 (Forestry), 24 (Ornamental/Turf), 27 (Right-of-Way), 31 (Public Health), 32 (Regulatory), 35 (Industrial/Institutional/Structural/Health) + +--- + +## Deliverables + +| Stage | Deliverable | Status | +|-------|-------------|--------| +| 1 | [Corrections Log](corrections.md) | Complete | +| 2 | [Archive Summary](archive-summary.md) | Complete | +| 3 | [YouTube Version](platforms/youtube.md) | Complete | +| 3 | [Website Version](platforms/website.md) | Complete | +| 3 | [Extension Agent Version](platforms/ext-agent.md) | Complete | +| 4 | [Quiz](activities/quiz.md) | Complete | +| 4 | [Matching Exercises](activities/matching.md) | Complete | +| 5 | [Prose Transcript](prose-transcript.md) | Complete | +| — | [Processing Log](processing-log.md) | Complete | + +--- + +## Session Overview + +Dr. Mark Czarnota presented a comprehensive overview of weed control strategies for landscape and nursery professionals, organized around three primary approaches: physical removal, physical barriers, and chemical weed control. He covered weed identification, life cycles, and the six characteristics that predict weediness, then discussed physical methods including tillage, flame weeding, and mulching, as well as biological control successes with grass carp, goats, and the thistle weevil. + +The bulk of the presentation focused on chemical control, covering pre-emergent versus post-emergent herbicides, selective versus non-selective products, and key product recommendations including Dimension (dithiopyr) and Marengo (indaziflam). Czarnota reviewed herbicide modes of action, application best practices, and glyphosate safety data, concluding with audience questions on torpedograss, Virginia buttonweed, and bermudagrass control in ornamentals. + +--- + +*Source: Corrected SRT — GTBOP_Transcript_2021-11-18_WeedControl.srt* +*Processed: 2026-03-17 | Pipeline v4.1* diff --git a/docs/green-commercial/2021-11-18-czarnota-weed-control/platforms/ext-agent.md b/docs/green-commercial/2021-11-18-czarnota-weed-control/platforms/ext-agent.md new file mode 100644 index 0000000..1d0f425 --- /dev/null +++ b/docs/green-commercial/2021-11-18-czarnota-weed-control/platforms/ext-agent.md @@ -0,0 +1,89 @@ +# GTBOP Webinar Archive — Extension Agent Resource +## Weed Control in the Landscape & Nursery +### Dr. Mark Czarnota — November 18, 2021 + +--- + +## CEU INFORMATION + +**Approved Categories:** + +| Category | Description | +|----------|-------------| +| **10** | **Private Applicator** | +| **21** | **Plant Agriculture** | +| **22** | **Animal Agriculture** | +| **23** | **Forestry** | +| **24** | **Ornamental and Turf Pest Control** | +| **27** | **Right-of-Way Pest Control** | +| **31** | **Public Health Pest Control** | +| **32** | **Regulatory Pest Control** | +| **35** | **Industrial, Institutional, Structural and Health Related** | + +**Credit Hours:** 1 hour +**Duration:** 50:05 (presentation + Q&A) + +--- + +## VIEWING INSTRUCTIONS FOR ASYNCHRONOUS CEU DELIVERY + +This recorded webinar is approved for continuing education credit in the categories listed above. For county extension agent programs delivering this content asynchronously: + +1. Attendees should view the full recording (approximately 50 minutes) +2. The presentation covers weed definitions, physical/biological/chemical control methods, herbicide categories, specific product recommendations, modes of action, and safety — broad applicability across multiple license categories +3. The Q&A section (beginning at 44:54) addresses torpedograss, Virginia buttonweed, and bermudagrass control + +--- + +## PRESENTATION SUMMARY + +**Speaker:** Dr. Mark Czarnota, Associate Professor of Horticulture (Weed Science), University of Georgia Griffin Campus +**Moderator:** Dr. Shimat Joseph, Turfgrass Entomologist, UGA Griffin Campus +**Series:** Green & Commercial + +Dr. Mark Czarnota presents a comprehensive overview of weed control strategies for landscape and nursery professionals. The session covers three primary control approaches — physical removal, physical barriers, and chemical weed control — with the majority of time devoted to herbicide selection and application. + +Key content areas include weed identification and life cycle management (annual, biennial, perennial), the distinction between pre-emergent and post-emergent herbicides, selective versus non-selective products, and granular versus sprayable formulations. Czarnota highlights underutilized products including Dimension (dithiopyr) and Marengo (indaziflam), reviews herbicide modes of action, and discusses glyphosate safety research. Biological control methods (grass carp, goats, thistle weevil) and physical barriers (fabrics, mulches) are also covered. + +**Practical takeaways for applicators:** +- Maintain a 2–4 inch mulch layer; bare soil always produces weed growth +- Apply pre-emergent herbicides in January–February in Georgia; ensure rain within 72 hours +- Dimension (dithiopyr) is safe on most turfgrasses and ornamentals and is significantly underutilized +- Marengo (indaziflam) provides up to 16 weeks of pre-emergent control on established woody ornamentals +- Field applications need 2–4 pre-emergent applications per year; containers need 4–6 +- Clethodim (Envoy) is the preferred selective grass herbicide for bermudagrass in ornamentals +- Glyphosate or triclopyr can be painted on stumps for selective removal without affecting surrounding plants + +--- + +## CONTENT TIMESTAMPS + +0:00 Introduction and Speaker Background +3:02 What Is a Weed? Definitions and Weediness Predictors +5:13 Challenging Weed Problems in Nursery Production +9:03 Weed Identification and Plant Life Cycles +11:55 Weed Control Methods: Physical Removal and Barriers +15:44 Biological Control: Grass Carp, Goats, Thistle Weevil +19:50 Chemical Weed Control: Impact of Major Herbicides +21:07 Pre-Emergent vs. Post-Emergent Herbicides +25:16 Trade Names, Active Ingredients, and Cost Savings +26:20 Herbicide Modes of Action +29:42 Pre-Emergent Herbicides for Landscape and Nursery +31:17 Post-Emergent and Combination Herbicides +35:16 Recommended Products: Marengo, BroadStar, SureGuard +36:40 Best Practices and Common Application Errors +40:21 Herbicide Fate, Organic Options, and Glyphosate Safety +43:40 Glyphosate Damage, Adjuvants, and Future Technologies +44:54 Q&A: Torpedograss, Virginia Buttonweed, Bermudagrass Control + +--- + +## ADDITIONAL RESOURCES + +- **Labels & Safety Data Sheets:** CDMS.net +- **Turfgrass Weed Control Referral:** Dr. Patrick McCullough, UGA + +--- + +*Processed for UGA Center for Urban Agriculture / GTBOP Archives* +*Source: Corrected SRT (Stage 1) — GTBOP_Transcript_2021-11-18_WeedControl.srt (786 blocks)* diff --git a/docs/green-commercial/2021-11-18-czarnota-weed-control/platforms/website.md b/docs/green-commercial/2021-11-18-czarnota-weed-control/platforms/website.md new file mode 100644 index 0000000..5782626 --- /dev/null +++ b/docs/green-commercial/2021-11-18-czarnota-weed-control/platforms/website.md @@ -0,0 +1,93 @@ +# GTBOP Webinar Archive Summary +## Weed Control in the Landscape & Nursery + +**Webinar Date:** November 18, 2021 +**Speaker:** Dr. Mark Czarnota, Associate Professor of Horticulture (Weed Science), University of Georgia Griffin Campus +**Moderator:** Dr. Shimat Joseph, Turfgrass Entomologist, UGA Griffin Campus +**Duration:** 50:05 +**Series:** Green & Commercial +**CEU Categories:** Category 10 (Private Applicator), Category 21 (Plant Agriculture), Category 22 (Animal Agriculture), Category 23 (Forestry), Category 24 (Ornamental and Turf Pest Control), Category 27 (Right-of-Way Pest Control), Category 31 (Public Health Pest Control), Category 32 (Regulatory Pest Control), Category 35 (Industrial, Institutional, Structural and Health Related) + +--- + +## NARRATIVE SUMMARY + +Dr. Mark Czarnota, a weed scientist at the University of Georgia Griffin Campus with expertise in ornamental, nursery, small fruit, and Christmas tree weed management, presented a comprehensive overview of weed control strategies for landscape and nursery professionals. Drawing on his background in weed science from Virginia Tech and Cornell University and his experience in the commercial nursery and chemical industries, Czarnota organized his talk around three primary control approaches: physical removal, physical barriers, and chemical weed control. + +Czarnota began by defining weeds and outlining six characteristics that predict whether a plant will become problematic, including vegetative reproductive structures, abundant seed production, rapid population establishment, seed dormancy, adaptive reproduction, and ability to colonize disturbed sites. He illustrated real-world challenges using examples of Marchantia (*Marchantia* spp.) infesting propagation houses, purple nutsedge (*Cyperus rotundus*) penetrating plastic mulch in blackberry plantings, and weeds emerging from container weep holes — situations where chemical options remain limited. + +The presentation covered physical control methods including tillage, flame weeding, and emerging automated weeding technology, as well as physical barriers such as landscape fabrics and mulches. Czarnota emphasized maintaining a two-to-four-inch mulch layer and noted that bare soil will always produce weed growth. He discussed biological control successes including grass carp for aquatic weed management, goats for kudzu suppression, and the thistle weevil for musk thistle control, along with the bioherbicide DeVine for strangler vine in citrus. + +The bulk of the presentation focused on chemical weed control, covering the distinction between pre-emergent and post-emergent herbicides, selective versus non-selective products, and granular versus sprayable formulations. Czarnota highlighted underutilized products including Dimension (dithiopyr) and Marengo (indaziflam), which can provide up to 16 weeks of pre-emergent control in established woody ornamentals. He reviewed modes of action for key herbicides including glyphosate's inhibition of the EPSP synthase pathway and the dinitroaniline herbicides' disruption of microtubule formation. Czarnota also discussed glyphosate safety, citing a 2017 Journal of the National Cancer Institute study of nearly 45,000 licensed applicators finding no association between glyphosate use and cancer incidence above national background rates. The session concluded with audience questions on torpedograss control using Drive (quinclorac), Virginia buttonweed management with atrazine, and selective bermudagrass control in ornamentals using clethodim (Envoy). + +--- + +## YOUTUBE TIMESTAMPS + +0:00 Introduction and Speaker Background +3:02 What Is a Weed? Definitions and Weediness Predictors +5:13 Challenging Weed Problems in Nursery Production +9:03 Weed Identification and Plant Life Cycles +11:55 Weed Control Methods: Physical Removal and Barriers +15:44 Biological Control: Grass Carp, Goats, Thistle Weevil +19:50 Chemical Weed Control: Impact of Major Herbicides +21:07 Pre-Emergent vs. Post-Emergent Herbicides +25:16 Trade Names, Active Ingredients, and Cost Savings +26:20 Herbicide Modes of Action +29:42 Pre-Emergent Herbicides for Landscape and Nursery +31:17 Post-Emergent and Combination Herbicides +35:16 Recommended Products: Marengo, BroadStar, SureGuard +36:40 Best Practices and Common Application Errors +40:21 Herbicide Fate, Organic Options, and Glyphosate Safety +43:40 Glyphosate Damage, Adjuvants, and Future Technologies +44:54 Q&A: Torpedograss, Virginia Buttonweed, Bermudagrass Control + +--- + +## QUESTIONS & ANSWERS + +**Q: What are the most important characteristics that make a plant likely to become a weed problem?** +A: According to Czarnota, six characteristics consistently predict weediness: the presence of a vegetative reproductive structure (like nutsedge tubers), abundant seed production (pigweed can produce 5,000–10,000 seeds per plant), rapid population establishment, seed dormancy allowing long-term survival in soil, the ability to reproduce both vegetatively and by seed, and the capacity to colonize disturbed sites. + +**Q: Why is maintaining a mulch layer so important for weed management in landscape beds?** +A: Czarnota emphasized that bare soil will always produce weed growth. A two-to-four-inch layer of composted organic mulch prevents weed seed germination, maintains soil temperature and moisture, and adds organic matter. This layer should be refreshed once or twice per year. Organic mulch should be composted and contain less than 10% white wood to avoid nitrogen tie-up. + +**Q: What is the difference between pre-emergent and post-emergent herbicides?** +A: Pre-emergent herbicides are applied to bare soil or mulch before weed seeds germinate. They need a rain event of about half an inch to one inch to move into the top quarter inch of soil where seeds germinate, and they provide roughly 8–12 weeks of control. Post-emergent herbicides are applied after weeds have emerged and need a period of dryness after application to be absorbed into the plant. + +**Q: Which pre-emergent herbicides does Czarnota recommend most for landscape use?** +A: Czarnota highlighted Dimension (dithiopyr) as one of the most underutilized pre-emergent herbicides, safe for use on most turfgrasses and landscape situations including broad woody ornamentals and some perennials and annuals. He also recommended Marengo (indaziflam) as one of the best products he has tested, providing up to 16 weeks of weed control in established woody ornamentals, though it does not control nutsedge. BroadStar (flumioxazin) as a granular and SureGuard as its sprayable form were also recommended. + +**Q: Why is glyphosate considered to have low toxicity to humans and animals?** +A: Glyphosate inhibits the EPSP synthase pathway, which produces three amino acids — tryptophan, phenylalanine, and tyrosine. This pathway does not exist in humans or any animals; we must obtain these amino acids through our diet. Because glyphosate targets a biochemical process absent from animal biology, it is one of the reasons the herbicide has low mammalian toxicity. Czarnota also cited a 2017 study from the Journal of the National Cancer Institute reviewing nearly 45,000 licensed applicators that found no association between glyphosate use and cancer above background rates. + +**Q: What are the advantages and disadvantages of granular versus sprayable herbicide formulations?** +A: Granular formulations fall through the plant canopy to the ground, making them safer for desirable plants, but they are more expensive per unit of active ingredient — most granulars are only about 2% active ingredient. Sprayable formulations are cheaper because the concentrate can be up to 90% active, but they contact plant foliage directly, increasing the risk of damage. Combination granular products like Snapshot and FreeHand offer both pre-emergent control and some burndown activity from oxyfluorfen. + +**Q: How should glyphosate be applied to avoid damaging desirable plants?** +A: Czarnota advised spraying glyphosate only on actively growing plant material, never applying it to the trunk or base of thin-barked trees, and ensuring the application dries before rain. He noted that repeated applications near ornamentals can cause "bud blasting" — sublethal damage where plants emerge with distorted growth. For stump control or selective removal, glyphosate or triclopyr can be painted directly onto cut stumps, which kills the plant about 90% of the time without affecting surrounding plants. + +**Q: What product works best for controlling torpedograss?** +A: Czarnota recommended Drive (quinclorac) as a product that controls torpedograss very well. He noted that Drive is not yet labeled for over-top use on ornamentals but has been used in blueberry and blackberry weed control. His university research has found it to be fairly safe on most woody ornamentals, though he cautioned it would not be a labeled application and recommended growers conduct their own trials. + +**Q: How can bermudagrass creeping into ornamental beds be selectively controlled?** +A: Czarnota recommended clethodim (Envoy) as the product giving approximately 10–15% better activity than alternatives, providing three to four months of bermudagrass suppression before retreatment is needed. Other effective grass herbicides include Segment, Fusilade DX (also sold as Grass-B-Gon), though all perform similarly. He noted that glyphosate also controls bermudagrass well at high rates but cannot be used selectively — it would kill both the bermudagrass and any desirable plants. + +**Q: What common mistakes reduce the effectiveness of herbicide applications?** +A: Czarnota listed several frequent errors: failing to irrigate after pre-emergent applications (they need rain within 72 hours), getting rain too soon after post-emergent applications, poorly calibrated equipment, poor herbicide selection for the target weed, and applying pre-emergent herbicides after weeds have already germinated. He recommended two to four applications per year for field situations and four to six for container production, using at least two different products to broaden the spectrum of control. + +**Q: What biological control methods have proven effective for weed management?** +A: Czarnota described several successful biocontrol examples. Grass carp stocked at 8–10 fish per surface acre effectively control submerged aquatic weeds. Goats can rapidly clear kudzu — in a demonstration at UGA's ag forestry field day, goats cleared a fenced kudzu area overnight, after which the site could be treated with herbicides on the regrowth. The thistle weevil successfully reduced musk thistle over a two-to-three-year period by larvae feeding on developing seeds, preventing reproduction. The bioherbicide DeVine, developed with the University of Florida, effectively controlled strangler vine in citrus. + +--- + +## ADDITIONAL RESOURCES + +- **Speaker Contact:** Dr. Mark Czarnota offered to answer additional questions via email (to be distributed to attendees) +- **Label and SDS Resources:** CDMS.net — contains approximately 80% of pesticide labels and safety data sheets +- **Turfgrass Weed Control Referral:** Dr. Patrick McCullough, UGA, for turfgrass-specific weed control questions (referenced during Virginia buttonweed discussion) + +--- + +*Processed for UGA Center for Urban Agriculture / GTBOP Archives* +*Source: Corrected SRT (Stage 1) — GTBOP_Transcript_2021-11-18_WeedControl.srt (786 blocks)* diff --git a/docs/green-commercial/2021-11-18-czarnota-weed-control/platforms/youtube.md b/docs/green-commercial/2021-11-18-czarnota-weed-control/platforms/youtube.md new file mode 100644 index 0000000..86d1e2c --- /dev/null +++ b/docs/green-commercial/2021-11-18-czarnota-weed-control/platforms/youtube.md @@ -0,0 +1,56 @@ +# GTBOP YouTube Description +## Weed Control in the Landscape & Nursery — Dr. Mark Czarnota (November 18, 2021) + +--- + +Weed Control in the Landscape & Nursery with Dr. Mark Czarnota + +Dr. Mark Czarnota, weed scientist at the University of Georgia Griffin Campus, presents a comprehensive overview of weed control strategies for landscape and nursery professionals. Topics include weed identification and life cycles, physical and biological control methods, pre-emergent and post-emergent herbicide categories, recommended products including Dimension (dithiopyr) and Marengo (indaziflam), herbicide modes of action, glyphosate safety research, and practical application tips. The session concludes with audience Q&A on torpedograss, Virginia buttonweed, and bermudagrass control in ornamentals. + +Speaker: Dr. Mark Czarnota, Associate Professor of Horticulture (Weed Science), UGA Griffin Campus +Moderator: Dr. Shimat Joseph, Turfgrass Entomologist, UGA Griffin Campus +Series: GTBOP Green & Commercial +CEU Categories: 10, 21, 22, 23, 24, 27, 31, 32, 35 + +🕐 TIMESTAMPS +0:00 Introduction and Speaker Background +3:02 What Is a Weed? Definitions and Weediness Predictors +5:13 Challenging Weed Problems in Nursery Production +9:03 Weed Identification and Plant Life Cycles +11:55 Weed Control Methods: Physical Removal and Barriers +15:44 Biological Control: Grass Carp, Goats, Thistle Weevil +19:50 Chemical Weed Control: Impact of Major Herbicides +21:07 Pre-Emergent vs. Post-Emergent Herbicides +25:16 Trade Names, Active Ingredients, and Cost Savings +26:20 Herbicide Modes of Action +29:42 Pre-Emergent Herbicides for Landscape and Nursery +31:17 Post-Emergent and Combination Herbicides +35:16 Recommended Products: Marengo, BroadStar, SureGuard +36:40 Best Practices and Common Application Errors +40:21 Herbicide Fate, Organic Options, and Glyphosate Safety +43:40 Glyphosate Damage, Adjuvants, and Future Technologies +44:54 Q&A: Torpedograss, Virginia Buttonweed, Bermudagrass Control + +❓ Q&A HIGHLIGHTS + +Q: Which pre-emergent herbicides are recommended most for landscape use? +A: Dimension (dithiopyr) is one of the most underutilized pre-emergent herbicides — safe for most turfgrasses, broad woody ornamentals, and some perennials and annuals. Marengo (indaziflam) provides up to 16 weeks of control in established woody ornamentals but does not control nutsedge. BroadStar (flumioxazin) as a granular and SureGuard as its sprayable form are also recommended. + +Q: What is the difference between pre-emergent and post-emergent herbicides? +A: Pre-emergent herbicides are applied to bare soil or mulch before weed seeds germinate and need a half-inch to one inch of rain to activate, providing 8–12 weeks of control. Post-emergent herbicides are applied after weeds have emerged and need a dry period after application to be absorbed into the plant. + +Q: How can bermudagrass creeping into ornamental beds be selectively controlled? +A: Clethodim (Envoy) gives approximately 10–15% better activity than alternatives, providing three to four months of suppression. Other options include Segment and Fusilade DX. Glyphosate also controls bermudagrass but cannot be used selectively over ornamentals. + +Q: What product works best for controlling torpedograss? +A: Drive (quinclorac) controls torpedograss very well. It is not yet labeled for over-top use on ornamentals but research at UGA has found it fairly safe on most woody ornamentals. + +Q: What common mistakes reduce the effectiveness of herbicide applications? +A: Failing to irrigate after pre-emergent applications (they need rain within 72 hours), rain too soon after post-emergent applications, poorly calibrated equipment, poor herbicide selection, and applying pre-emergent herbicides after weeds have already germinated. + +📌 RESOURCES +Labels & Safety Data Sheets: CDMS.net +Turfgrass Weed Control: Contact Dr. Patrick McCullough, UGA + +Presented by the University of Georgia Center for Urban Agriculture +Getting the Best of Pests (GTBOP) Webinar Series diff --git a/docs/green-commercial/2021-11-18-czarnota-weed-control/processing-log.md b/docs/green-commercial/2021-11-18-czarnota-weed-control/processing-log.md new file mode 100644 index 0000000..72f6966 --- /dev/null +++ b/docs/green-commercial/2021-11-18-czarnota-weed-control/processing-log.md @@ -0,0 +1,199 @@ +# GTBOP Processing Log: Weed Control in the Landscape & Nursery — Dr. Mark Czarnota +## Conversation Snapshot — March 1, 2026 + +--- + +## Webinar Details + +| Field | Value | +|-------|-------| +| **Title** | Weed Control in the Landscape & Nursery | +| **Speaker** | Dr. Mark Czarnota, Associate Professor of Horticulture, UGA Griffin Campus | +| **Moderator** | Dr. Shimat Joseph, Turfgrass Entomologist, UGA | +| **Webinar Date** | November 18, 2021 | +| **Series** | Green & Commercial | +| **Duration** | 50:05 | +| **Topic Area** | Weed Science | +| **CEU Categories** | Cat 10 (Private), 21 (Plant Ag), 22 (Animal Ag), 23 (Forestry), 24 (Ornamental/Turf), 27 (Right-of-Way), 31 (Public Health), 32 (Regulatory), 35 (Industrial/Institutional/Structural/Health) | + +--- + +## Pipeline Stages Completed + +| Stage | Deliverable | Filename | Status | +|-------|-------------|----------|--------| +| 1 | Corrected SRT | `GTBOP_Transcript_2021-11-18_WeedControl.srt` | ✅ Complete | +| 1 | Correction Log | `GTBOP_Corrections_2021-11-18_WeedControl.md` | ✅ Complete | +| 2 | Archive Summary | `GTBOP_Archive_Summary_2021-11-18_WeedControl.md` | ✅ Complete | +| 3 | YouTube Version | `GTBOP_YouTube_2021-11-18_WeedControl.md` | ✅ Complete | +| 3 | Website Version | `GTBOP_Website_2021-11-18_WeedControl.md` | ✅ Complete | +| 3 | Extension Agent Version | `GTBOP_ExtAgent_2021-11-18_WeedControl.md` | ✅ Complete | +| 4 | Moodle Quiz | `GTBOP_Quiz_2021-11-18_WeedControl.md` | ✅ Complete | +| 4 | Moodle Matching | `GTBOP_Matching_2021-11-18_WeedControl.md` | ✅ Complete | +| 4 | Moodle Review | `GTBOP_Review_2021-11-18_WeedControl.md` | ✅ Complete | +| 5 | Prose Transcript | `GTBOP_ProseTranscript_2021-11-18_WeedControl.md` | ✅ Complete | +| 6 | Writing Resources | — | Not requested | +| — | Processing Log | `GTBOP_ProcessingLog_2021-11-18_WeedControl.md` | ✅ This document | + +--- + +## Stage 1: Transcript Correction + +**Source file:** `Weed_Control_in_the_Landscape___Nursery_with_Dr__Mark_Czarnota_2021_11_18.srt` +**Block count:** 786 blocks, 3,144 lines +**Reading method:** Sequential chunked reads (8 chunks at ~400 lines with overlapping boundaries) +**Block count verification:** 786 original = 786 corrected ✓ + +**Overall transcript quality:** Moderate to poor. Whisper struggled significantly with weed science terminology throughout the presentation. Three factors compounded recognition errors: (1) the high density of herbicide product names and chemical terms, (2) Dr. Czarnota's natural conversational pace with frequent asides, and (3) intermittent audio quality issues from his satellite internet connection. The technical heart of the presentation (~20:00–36:00) had the highest density of corrections. + +**Total corrections:** ~95 individual corrections across ~65 unique error patterns. + +**Dominant error patterns:** + +*Herbicide product names rendered as unrelated English words.* Whisper consistently phonetized chemical names into plausible-sounding but incorrect word sequences. Examples: "spectacle" → Specticle, "Best Grant" → Basagran, "Sam Ziner" → Simazine, "Penic" → Pennant, "CDGAT" → acetic acid, "Flumeox" → flumioxazin, "penimethylene" → pendimethalin. + +*"Ornamental" systematically garbled.* The word "ornamental" was misrecognized in nearly every instance, producing a wide variety of substitutions: "ore metal industry," "water metals," "grape minerals," "bro woody or metals." This was the single most persistent error pattern in the transcript. + +*Botanical and technical terms rendered phonetically.* Scientific terminology was consistently wrong: "hypocaudal" → hypocotyl, "radical" → radicle, "microtubial" → microtubule, "fluidity numbers" → ploidy numbers, "full loaded" → phloem-loaded. + +*Speaker name inconsistency.* Dr. Czarnota's name was rendered multiple ways: "Zermota," "Zornetta," "Czarnota." Dr. Joseph's first name appeared as "Shemette" and "Shemak" as well as the correct "Shimat." + +*Weed science domain confusion.* Whisper frequently substituted common English words for weed science terms: "wheat science" → weed science, "wheat problems" → weed problems, "post-abargin" → post-emergent, "row spectrum weight" → broad-spectrum weed. + +**Major correction categories with examples:** + +- **Speaker names (6 corrections):** Zermota/Zornetta → Czarnota, Shemette/Shemak → Shimat +- **Grass species (12+ corrections):** Bermuda grass → bermudagrass, turf grass → turfgrass, nut sedge → nutsedge, torpedo grass → torpedograss, crab grass → crabgrass +- **Chemical/product names (40+ corrections):** The largest category. Included both common corrections from the reference table and many novel patterns specific to this weed science presentation. +- **Technical terms (15+ corrections):** Botanical terms, application methods, and weed science concepts +- **Grammar and readability (20+ corrections):** Sentence fragments, missing punctuation, filler word removal + +**Audio verification round:** 14 items flagged for verification against the original audio recording. All 14 were resolved: + +| Block | Flagged Text | Resolution | +|-------|-------------|------------| +| 62 | "wild years" | → "why I'm here" | +| 120 | "salient plant" | → "azalea plant" | +| 141 | "or a board or glyphosate" | → "glufosinate or Reward or glyphosate" | +| 173 | "maroism" | → "if you're familiar with them" | +| 219 | "Banville" | → "they have all" | +| 294 | "Renac are really caused" | → "prevent a seed or really cause" | +| 479 | "As I saw some in a trough land" | → "as isoxaben and trifluralin" | +| 506 | "Penic" | → "Pennant" | +| 557 | "Sam Ziner" | → "Simazine" | +| 570 | "sable pond" | → "sabal palm" | +| 634 | "Post herbicides about five" | Verified correct, no change needed | +| 638 | "CDGAT" | → "acetic acid" | +| 684 | "pregnant mulchins" | → "impregnated mulches" | +| 760 | "already methanced" | → [laughing] (laughter misheard as words) | + +**New correction patterns for the Common Corrections Reference:** + +This was the first weed science-focused webinar processed through the pipeline, and it produced a substantial set of new Whisper error patterns. Herbicide product names were the dominant category — many of these patterns will recur in future weed science sessions, particularly presentations by Dr. Czarnota and Dr. McCullough. Key additions worth incorporating: + +- pendimethalin (Whisper: "penimethylene"), flumioxazin ("Flumeox"), indaziflam ("Daziflam"), Basagran ("Best Grant"), Sandea ("Sandia"), Simazine ("Sam Ziner"), Pennant ("Penic"), acetic acid ("CDGAT") +- hypocotyl ("hypocaudal"), radicle ("radical"), microtubule ("microtubial"), phloem-loaded ("full loaded"), ploidy numbers ("fluidity numbers") +- The "ornamental" garbling pattern (ore metal, water metals, etc.) should be flagged as a systematic issue for any presentation in this topic area + +--- + +## Stage 2: Archive Package + +**Narrative summary:** 362 words, covering the full arc of the presentation from weed definitions through biological control, chemical herbicide categories, specific product recommendations, modes of action, glyphosate safety research, and Q&A topics. + +**YouTube timestamps:** 17 chapters at approximately one every 3 minutes. Density is appropriate for the content — the presentation moved quickly through many distinct topics. All timestamps verified against the corrected SRT. + +**Q&A pairs:** 11 pairs covering weediness characteristics, mulch importance, pre- vs. post-emergent distinction, recommended products (Dimension, Marengo, BroadStar/SureGuard), glyphosate mammalian safety, granular vs. sprayable formulations, glyphosate damage avoidance, torpedograss control (Drive/quinclorac), bermudagrass selective control (clethodim/Envoy), common application errors, and biological control successes. + +--- + +## Stage 3: Platform Optimization + +Three versions produced: + +**YouTube Version:** 4,010 characters (under 5,000 limit). Condensed summary with all 17 timestamps retained. Q&A trimmed to 5 highest-value pairs: pre-emergent recommendations, pre- vs. post-emergent distinction, bermudagrass control, torpedograss control, and common application errors. Resource links included (CDMS.net, Dr. Patrick McCullough for turfgrass questions). + +**Website Version:** Full Stage 2 archive package with updated CEU category listing across all 9 approved categories. + +**Extension Agent Version:** CEU-forward format with category table at the top showing all 9 approved categories and 1-hour credit. Includes asynchronous viewing instructions for county extension programs and a condensed practical takeaways section extracting actionable recommendations from the presentation (mulch depth, application timing, product selection, frequency guidelines). + +--- + +## Stage 4: Moodle Activities + +**Quiz:** 15 multiple-choice questions with timestamp references and block citations. +- Difficulty distribution: 6 Recall (40%), 6 Application (40%), 3 Analysis (20%) +- Coverage spans early content (weed definitions, biocontrol), middle (herbicide categories, modes of action, products), and late (application practices, Q&A topics) +- Notable analysis questions: glyphosate low mammalian toxicity reasoning (EPSP synthase pathway absent in animals), annual chemical vs. hand weeding cost comparison ($800–1,200 vs. $2,400–4,800/acre/year), 2,4-D selectivity via NIH shift detoxification + +**Matching exercises:** 3 exercises with timestamp references and block citations. +- Exercise 1 — Product-Ingredient matching: 8 pairs (Dimension/dithiopyr, Marengo/indaziflam, BroadStar/flumioxazin, Snapshot/isoxaben+trifluralin, Envoy/clethodim, Drive/quinclorac, Treflan/trifluralin, SedgeHammer/halosulfuron) +- Exercise 2 — Timing-Practice matching: 6 pairs covering application scenarios and outcomes +- Exercise 3 — Species ID / Control Method matching: 8 pairs mapping specific weeds to recommended control methods + +**Review activities:** 6 timestamp-linked review tasks covering weediness predictors, biological control methods, pre- vs. post-emergent mechanics, modes of action, product recommendations, and common application errors. Initially omitted as the instructions list this activity type as "Optional" — generated on request. Going forward, review activities should be treated as standard. + +--- + +## Stage 5: Prose Transcript + +**Word count:** 9,834 +**Section structure:** 24 H2 sections, 4 H3 subsections (1 under Modes of Action, 3 under Q&A) +**Speaker labels:** 43 total (Mark Czarnota: 30, Shimat Joseph: 11, Rich Braman: 2) +**Italicized scientific names:** 3 (*Marchantia* ×2, *Phyllanthus* ×1) + +**Section architecture:** +1. Introduction and Speaker Background +2. What Is a Weed? Definitions and Weediness Predictors +3. Challenging Weed Problems in Nursery Production +4. Weed Identification and Plant Life Cycles +5. Weed Control Methods: Physical Removal +6. Physical Barriers: Fabrics and Mulches +7. Biological Control +8. Chemical Weed Control: Impact of Major Herbicides +9. Pre-Emergent vs. Post-Emergent Herbicides +10. Herbicide Formulations +11. Trade Names, Active Ingredients, and Cost Savings +12. Herbicide Modes of Action (H3: Dinitroaniline Herbicides) +13. Pre-Emergent Herbicides for Landscape and Nursery +14. Post-Emergent and Selective Herbicides +15. Combination Granular Herbicides +16. Recommended Products: Marengo, BroadStar, SureGuard +17. Best Practices and Common Application Errors +18. Glyphosate Application and Safety Data +19. Herbicide Fate, Half-Lives, and Organic Options +20. Glyphosate: Formulations, Safety Research, and Damage Symptoms +21. Adjuvants and Stump Control +22. Emerging Technologies +23. Questions and Answers (H3: Torpedograss Control, Virginia Buttonweed Control, Bermudagrass Control in Ornamentals) +24. Closing + +The section count is higher than typical for a 50-minute presentation because Dr. Czarnota moved rapidly through many distinct topics. The presentation covered more ground than most GTBOP sessions, which tend to focus on a narrower subject area in greater depth. The section breaks reflect genuine topic transitions in his delivery. + +--- + +## Presentation Content Overview + +Dr. Czarnota delivered a comprehensive survey of weed control methods for landscape and nursery professionals, covering physical, biological, and chemical approaches. The presentation opened with weed definitions and six characteristics that predict weediness, then moved through challenging real-world problems (Marchantia in propagation, nutsedge penetrating plastic mulch, container weep hole weeds). The biological control section included grass carp, goats for kudzu, thistle weevil, DeVine bioherbicide, and Czarnota's own PhD research on root exudates as natural pre-emergent herbicides. + +The bulk of the presentation covered chemical weed control: the distinction between pre-emergent and post-emergent herbicides, how each works at the plant biology level, formulation types (granular vs. sprayable with cost/safety tradeoffs), and specific product recommendations. Czarnota identified Dimension (dithiopyr) as the most underutilized pre-emergent and Marengo (indaziflam) as delivering up to 16 weeks of control. He explained modes of action for glyphosate (EPSP synthase inhibition) and dinitroaniline herbicides (microtubule disruption), then addressed glyphosate safety concerns citing the 2017 JNCI study of 44,932 applicators. The Q&A covered torpedograss (Drive/quinclorac), Virginia buttonweed (atrazine), and bermudagrass in ornamentals (clethodim/Envoy). The session had notably broad CEU applicability — 9 categories — reflecting the cross-disciplinary scope of the content. + +--- + +## Notes for Team + +**New speaker for reference roster:** Dr. Mark Czarnota — Associate Professor of Horticulture, UGA Griffin Campus. Education: BS University of Delaware (1985), MS Virginia Tech (weed science, 1995), PhD Cornell (weed science, 2001). Industry experience includes plant nursery sales and DuPont chemical lab (Stine-Haskell). Research covers weed management in nursery/ornamental plants, landscapes, small fruits, Christmas trees, and orchard floor management. He is not currently in the project speaker roster. + +**New Whisper correction patterns:** This session produced the largest set of new correction patterns since the pipeline was established — roughly 20 novel chemical/product name patterns and 10 technical term patterns specific to weed science. These should be incorporated into the Common Corrections Reference, particularly for future sessions by Dr. Czarnota, Dr. McCullough, or any weed science presenter. The "ornamental" garbling pattern is especially important to document as a systematic Whisper failure. + +**CEU and certificate course observations:** The breadth of this presentation (9 CEU categories) makes it a strong candidate for inclusion in multiple certificate course tracks. The content on herbicide modes of action and the glyphosate safety data would pair well with Dr. Scharf's insecticide classification session for a cross-disciplinary "Pesticide Science Fundamentals" module. The practical product recommendation sections are directly relevant to Cat 24 (Ornamental/Turf) certificate courses. + +**Pipeline note — Review Activities:** The Stage 4 review activities were initially omitted because the instructions describe them as "Optional." They were generated on request and should be treated as standard deliverables going forward for all processed webinars. + +**Stage 6 available:** The prose transcript is complete and ready to serve as input for Stage 6 writing resources if a publication project involving this content arises. Given the comprehensive product coverage, a quick-reference compendium of herbicides for landscape professionals would be a natural fit. + +--- + +*Processing completed March 1, 2026* +*Pipeline: Stages 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 + Processing Log* +*Project: GTBOP Webinar Archive Processing (v4.1 instructions)* diff --git a/docs/green-commercial/2021-11-18-czarnota-weed-control/prose-transcript.md b/docs/green-commercial/2021-11-18-czarnota-weed-control/prose-transcript.md new file mode 100644 index 0000000..bec0554 --- /dev/null +++ b/docs/green-commercial/2021-11-18-czarnota-weed-control/prose-transcript.md @@ -0,0 +1,331 @@ +# Weed Control in the Landscape and Nursery +## GTBOP Green & Commercial Series — November 18, 2021 + +**Speaker:** Dr. Mark Czarnota, Associate Professor of Horticulture, University of Georgia Griffin Campus +**Moderator:** Dr. Shimat Joseph, Turfgrass Entomologist, University of Georgia +**Duration:** 50:05 + +--- + +## Introduction and Speaker Background + +**Shimat Joseph:** Welcome everyone. Today our first speaker is Dr. Mark Czarnota. Dr. Czarnota is an associate professor of horticulture located here at the University of Georgia Griffin campus. He received his master's in weed science from Virginia Tech in 1995 and a PhD in weed science from Cornell University in 2001. His primary responsibility is applied research and extension on weed management in nursery and ornamental plants and also in the landscape. So welcome Dr. Czarnota. The floor is yours. Oh, thanks. Thanks. + +**Mark Czarnota:** I appreciate it. And I guess I'm ready to go. I got to share my screen again here, I think. Exactly. There we go. Is it stolen back? + +**Shimat Joseph:** Now can you see it? Yes I can see it. Okay we're good to go. + +**Mark Czarnota:** And anyway hopefully we don't get the zoom bomb. Hopefully Richie prevented all that. Anyway, I'm going to talk about weed control in the landscape and nursery today. And if you have any questions, let me know. And I was going to tell you, Matt, that I have a history slide of where I came from and what I did. Anyway, the next, let me see. How do I... Does that come through? Yeah. I have two. + +**Shimat Joseph:** I don't know. + +**Mark Czarnota:** I do. Give me one sec here. I just got to get it. That's fine. Okay, I got two open. That's why. Okay, so let's go. So anyway, this is a brief history. As Shimat said, I got my degrees. I actually went to the University of Delaware for undergrad in '85, Virginia Tech for a master's, Cornell for a PhD. And I worked for three years between my master's and PhD, or from my bachelor's and master's degree. I was at a plant nursery selling trees for about a year and a half, selling landscape plants, and then was at the DuPont chemical company when they were, before they merged with Dow. And I was at their Stine Haskell location just as a lab technician. And, but it was a weed control. It was in the weed science lab. + +So anyway, I work for, of course, you mentioned what I do now. And I have a really strange three-way appointment, which is probably going to change again. And then I cover all aspects of weed control and ornamental, small fruits, Christmas trees, and orchard floor management. And I also do a little bit of work. And some of you might see my work I've been doing with the Christmas tree industry. We've been working with how to propagate that. And I've worked on a couple other propagation projects. But the main thrust of why I'm here is weed science. + +So I guess I have 45 minutes to go over this talk. I'll go as quick as I can. I got a lot of information to tell you and hopefully you'll gain some weed science knowledge and information on how to control weeds in the landscape and nursery. + +--- + +## What Is a Weed? Definitions and Weediness Predictors + +**Mark Czarnota:** So before, of course, I deal with weeds and weed control, but the big thing — but if you ever take a weed science class, I don't know how many of you had one, but weeds are, there's a laundry list of what actually a weed is. And we could talk about them being weeds that grow where they're not wanted, a plant out of place. My favorite is a plant whose virtues have not yet been discovered. It might be a chemical in that plant that might save your life or something that we can utilize for other things and as well as food, but other pharmaceutical needs and whatnot. And the biggest reason that I'm here is because their plants out there cause economic loss and we try to make growers as profitable as possible. But there's lots of definitions of that. + +If you ever take a weed science class, some of the things you talk about in the first class would be something like — and I've sat through lots and lots of weed control talks and seminars. And so I've been through a lot of these where these people come up with basically mathematical models that try to predict whether a plant's going to become a weed or not. For example, if you import a plant, some type of annual type plant in the U.S., you'll want to know some information about whether or not it's going to be a weed problem. And they always come up with these different categories. And the ones I have here, the six I have here, are ones that always pop up. + +And it's the presence of a vegetative reproductive structure. That would be like yellow or purple nutsedge. And I'll show you a picture of it, two of that. Abundant seed production, and that would be a plant like pigweed, if you're familiar with all the problems in South Georgia, where one plant will make 5,000 to 10,000 seeds per plant. It's not unusual. Rapid population establishment where that seed can germinate and grow quickly and go to flower and seed again and spread quickly. Seed dormancy, having seed that are dormant for a long time. Adaptive, if you have both the ability to produce lots of seeds and vegetative parts. And if they can occupy a disturbed site, like in mostly in agricultural situations, you'd think of things like that. + +--- + +## Challenging Weed Problems in Nursery Production + +**Mark Czarnota:** And some of the problems that I run into — here's a few that I had difficulty trying to control, but this was actually the, in a propagation house in a greenhouse industry, they were growing *Marchantia* growing azaleas and had problem with this weed called *Marchantia*. And excuse me, this weed was, they of course want something they put down on this. And what happens is this will suck up nutrients and water and prevent the azalea plant that's recently been rooted from a rooted cutting to getting up to full size to where they could sell it. + +There's a couple things. We found actually a great product that will control this. It was actually a fungicide, someone who was playing around with another weed scientist that, and we started testing it and it looked great. And unfortunately it didn't get registered by the EPA in our country, even though it was a fungicide already labeled Europe. So strange situation, but it had to do with how they wrote the legal up. And it was, they didn't consult with any of the academic people, which could have helped guide them a little bit. And they didn't do that and they kicked it out because of the toxicology problem. But here's something that we really have no, nothing we can really spray on as a herbicide. And you basically have to go back to doing cultural things where you'd have to cut down on watering as much as you can. Times that the plant is watered and try to keep the surface as dry as you can. Can you use some pre-emergent granular herbicides to help keep it beat back a little bit? But this is a difficult problem we can continue to face in some growers and propagate stuff, might be aware of it. + +Here's one where I can control plant weeds in the top of the container, but when the weep holes where the seeds come out, it was a difficult situation. You could just spray this with glufosinate or Reward or glyphosate and eliminate this. But I can't put a herbicide in the weep hole. It's just impossible. + +And anyway, another one in blackberries where I had purple nutsedge coming through the plastic. Most people try to use the plastic type cover and a purple nutsedge, even if there's been fumigated, will survive the fumigation, the tubers will germinate and easily poke through six mil plastic, you can see here. We really have no label product to control this and blackberry, but we were researching Sandea, which you might know as a SedgeHammer as a possible alternative. And if this is yellow nutsedge, which can do the same thing, I could use Basagran or a few other things to try to help them. But it was another situation where there's so much of an answer. + +This is a picture from when I was out in Oregon one time. This would be people managing grafted cuttings where they actually seeded out plants, grafted them to these seedlings, cut out the actual plant they didn't want, allowed the seedling to grow. This would have been an ash of some type. I don't know which one, I can't remember. And of course the weed control is fabulous here. And this would be, there was hand weeding done in here as well as chemical weed control. And you can see it's perfect for, this is where you're going to get the maximum amount of growth on your tree with no interference from any weed problems. + +Another situation, this is one just south of me where I live in Pike County. There's a nursery called, it's Mid-Georgia Nursery. And anyway, this is one where they would try to grow, for example, Southern Magnolias. And you try to keep a four to six foot alley where the plants are actually growing and keep that completely weed free and just mow the alleys where the grasses or weeds are. And then try to get as much growth out of these trees as you can and harvest them as quickly as you can. So this is a situation where you'd want to use pre-herbicides to keep the weeds down and you might have to use some post-herbicides in other states where the pre-emergent weed control has failed or stopped working and you just have to do a cleanup application. You see all the situations that you can run into. + +--- + +## Weed Identification and Plant Life Cycles + +**Mark Czarnota:** But when you're trying to control weeds, one of the most important things I tell people is to try to be able to identify the weed you're trying to control. And here's just a quick picture to try to refresh people or make people aware of this. If you're not too versed on weed control, but for example, we have a picture of yellow nutsedge on the left and another picture of chamberbitter or a leaf flower, a couple of different names for that plant. But it's a *Phyllanthus* species that you'll see in containers. And we have little ones that kind of look like tiny mimosa trees if you're familiar with them. It's another species, but very similar growth pattern and can be a problem in the landscape. + +But the yellow nutsedge will be a plant that's a vegetative, coming back from a vegetative structure every year. We'll die back to the ground, come back from a vegetative structure, and then you have chamber bitter, which will be a plant growing from seed, but it's only going to germinate when the soil temperatures are up around — you have to get the soil temperatures above 70 to get it to germinate. And it tends to be a late spring, early summer weed that you start seeing. So if you don't have a pre-emergent herbicide down during that period that's active, then you're not going to control this plant very well. So you have to think about the strategies. And if you know about the history of the weed problems that you've had, you can start thinking about, okay, what I got to do is try to control these. With the yellow nutsedge, you don't have to use post-emergent type herbicide. And that can be limiting depending on where you have the yellow nutsedge growing. + +Glyphosate will work really well on it as long as you have the right rates. And you can use a product called Sandea, which I'll show you a list of these as we go forward here. And that'll selectively control it in landscape situations as long as you keep the spray off of most of the landscape ornamentals. + +And then on top of that, I'm going to try to hopefully beat into your head that you need to really consider using pre-emergent herbicides, but on particularly annual type plants. But the life cycle of plants are either annual or perennial, and sometimes they fall in that gray area where they're a biannual, where our plant is. It's going to last about 18 months to 24 months, the plant will stick around. It's usually most plants that are biennial are about 18 months from seed to finally when they perish or die and then pass their genes on through the seeds. But annuals, of course, will only do that by seed. Perennials, of course, can do that from seed or vegetative structures. For example, we meet bermudagrass all around and sod. And then with plants like yellow nutsedge, we come in either containerized ornamentals or bald burlap ornamentals or in sod. + +And then, but plants like dogfennel, they come from seed. Originally where they blow out like dandelion seed growing, bland in a dandelion field germinate. But once that plant's germinated, it's going to come back as a perennial. We require a very different weed control method to control it. And you'd have to go back to use the selective post-emergent herbicides. And we'll talk about those here in a little bit. + +--- + +## Weed Control Methods: Physical Removal + +**Mark Czarnota:** As far as the control options, you have physical removal, physical barriers, and chemical weed control. And these are my categories of weed control. I try to simplify it as best I can. And of course, I'm going to talk about each one of these, the first three very briefly, and of course, chemical weed control. I'm going to spend a few minutes on that one. + +As far as physical removal, that's just tillage, mainly used in bed preparation and hand removal, can be useful with annual type shallow-rooted plants. That's really, in the fields I work in, that's pretty much all we can do, utilize our own as far as tillage. And the physical removal also would be when encounter, we can use heat or flame. That's used quite a bit in the industry. It used to be a lot more, but the flamethrowers can be used in landscape situations where you can buy propane tanks to burn stuff down. + +But anyway, I was talking about heat being utilized in the soil system and of course fire in the landscape type system. I mean, in the forestry system. But anyway, they have all, there's going to be a lot of automation come in certain situations, particularly like vegetable situations. Like this is an auto hoe I took out this past January or February out of the publication I get. And this is a type of situation where you're growing like broccoli, they can scan the surface and they know exactly what the broccoli leaves look like, there's mechanical pickers inside that machine, they won't let us look into it because it's proprietary, and but then you're going to see these type things develop as we move forward in a lot of situations. But we got a long ways to go, but I think as time moves forward, it's going to be a very popular thing because they don't require an insurance policy or 24 hours a day, seven days a week and don't complain about bathroom breaks. + +--- + +## Physical Barriers: Fabrics and Mulches + +**Mark Czarnota:** As far as physical barriers, all these are, if you really think about these are just a fabric or some type of carrier on the ground to prevent the seed from germinating. And that's the whole goal of these. And there are fabrics, films, layers that smother plant growth. There are many synthetic fabrics that allow, you want these fabrics to allow air and water to pass, but prevent the weed seed from popping through. And there was lots of research done on this in the 90s, they're used to generally in combination with some type of mulch being inorganic mulch like stone or even regular mulch that are organic mulch which I don't recommend. And they can, they're usually about 10 cents a square foot somewhere around that barrier. They prevent weeds from — and weeds often penetrate these which can be a problem. But as long as you keep the UV light off of them, you don't, they can last eight, ten years no problem. Unlike plastics where they, six plastic is for about three years roughly is what we get out in the field until it naturally starts falling apart, in like blueberry situations. + +As far as mulches, there's organic and inorganic. And organic mulches would be like pine needles, pine bark, wood chips. And inorganic mulches, inorganic would be like river rock, stone, marble chips, lava rock, so lots of these out on the market. Organic mulch should be composted. Make sure there's no wood in them or very limited, less than 10%. You should see that white wood. That's what you don't want to see. But if it is, it just needs to be composted for several months to get rid of that, to make sure it's not going to affect nitrogen uptake with your plant. + +We try to maintain the two to four inch layer of mulch to maintain good weed control. We probably want to do that once or twice a year at least to keep the mulch layer refreshed. And this helps maintain soil temperatures and moisture as well as adds organic matter. But a big thing I used to tell and always remember is you have bare soil, you're going to have weed growth. Try to remember that. You have to get mulch or plant material growing on that. + +--- + +## Biological Control + +**Mark Czarnota:** So anyway, as far as bio control, there's not that much out there that most of us at the research level. And, but there are some situations where it works well. I do answer questions quite a bit on aquatic weed control, but there's, these are pathogens, insects and grazing animals can be used for weed control, but grass carp are very popular. And if you have a small pond, we'd recommend about eight, 10 grass carp per surface acre. And they do a really good job of controlling stuff over time. A lot of the emergent weeds, a lot of the submerged weeds, and they're pretty good. + +And a lot, there are some people I see use geese. And of course, goats, I'll show you a picture of one that I saw. And geese, they run them around in a lot of nursery situations, and they'll eat a lot of those small seedlings, weed seedlings coming up. And then pathogens and insects are hard to develop. They can move the desire of a plant and have a short shelf life. A few marketable products are available. + +There was a product that called DeVine that was real popular, that was popular with the citrus growers to control Florida Strangler Vine, worked real well. When it worked so well, it killed everything and they couldn't sell it anymore, but they didn't plan on doing that. But that was one of the reasons that they, like the USDA and the company worked on it together, put much of our investment in it, but it was an organic type of thing, worked real well. + +Goats are one, or sheep are one, where this picture I took where they were, this was our ag forest field day, probably six years ago. And anyway, the guy came out from Fort Valley, fenced in an area of kudzu, and this was in about four o'clock in the afternoon. I came back the next morning and this is what it looked like. It'll be a real good situation where you can come in here and chop all this stuff out now and you can use herbicides on regrowth. It would be a good example of a combo combination type attack and control on weeds where you use an organically type situation and also chemical means also. + +The biocontrol on the thistle weevil worked really well too. And it was a one where you would actually release this weevil, the thistle weevil eggs around these thistles that are biennial. They would hatch out, produce a little worm. You could see in the second picture. It's right here. And that would actually choke out where all the seeds are developing, prevent a seed or really cause the seed development to not develop so well. And you'd have very limited production of the seed. So you don't get much of the regrowth. So over about a two, three year period, these little weevils can eliminate a lot of this problem. And so it worked as a good example of where bio control worked really well. + +We might not see many of these organisms develop in the future, but you'll probably see a lot of their products or mechanisms come to light. I think you'll see a lot of that. The first bioherbicide virus was released back in 2014 for a controlled tropical soda apple. That was a real interesting thing they came out with, but it was a thing out of the University of Florida. + +And the first top picture is a picture of my doctorate degree where I worked on — this is actually a root hair, root hair is touching the glass slide and off the slides, there's this root exudate coming off. So it's very similar to a product called Atrazine, which you're familiar with. And that product actually, that plant product is also fairly toxic, but it does a really good job of providing pre-emergent control. And I spent four years of my life working on it. I could tell you a whole lot of information about it, but you'd probably be bored to tears. But anyway, what we were hoping to do though, is take that, the genes that produce, they're able to produce that and put that in another plant like rice and overexpress it. And then maybe get a plant to produce some herbicide. But anyway, there's all kinds of problems with that, but it's a great idea. + +This will be a picture of the thistle that we were released in 1990 and what it looked like in 96. These pictures off of Dr. Bunn and I can see what's working with this in the nineties. And it worked quite well. And usually when you work with grown-up pasture people, you might get a bush hog to be the best means of weed control. And this is something that would work real well, I think, for people, particularly on these invasive type weeds like thistle. It was a weed we brought in and imported it. It became a problem. And, of course, cattle don't like to eat it. + +--- + +## Chemical Weed Control: Impact of Major Herbicides + +**Mark Czarnota:** So our chemical weed control now, I'm going to talk a bit about this and hopefully I'll get you something before that. Hopefully you'll learn something from this. + +But anyway, the chemical weed control is usually, it's sometimes the last alternative. And it's usually combined with other control measures for controlling weed. The products are safe when used properly, most of them have been around for longer than 50 years. They are easy to use and save hours of labor. And there's some products that really have huge impacts on food production. But 2,4-D, atrazine, and glyphosate, they've changed the world forever as far as production. And most people don't know, 2,4-D is still, I think, number one produced herbicide in the world. It goes back and forth between glyphosate and 2,4-D. + +But anyway, 2,4-D, it works real well in row crops that are grass crops, kills broadleaves for you. And there's a lot of plants that are getting transformed to be able to handle 2,4-D applications over the top of them. So, for example, if you can put a 2,4-D resistant gene in soybeans and kill off plants that might be resistant to glyphosate. So, we're doing a lot of that type of stuff now, but these three products have impacted our abilities to produce our food and allow people to do other things in life, be doctors, lawyers, economics people, entertainers. Otherwise, they'd be out pulling weeds in the field. And I don't like doing that. + +--- + +## Pre-Emergent vs. Post-Emergent Herbicides + +**Mark Czarnota:** Now, hopefully you can listen to this. This is where you might gain some really good information. But of the herbicides that are out there, there's pre-emergent herbicides and post-emergent herbicides. Those are the main two categories we have. And pre-emergent herbicides are applied to bare soil mulch before germination seeds. They need water to move or activate the soils into the seed germination zone, which means you want to put these products on before the seeds come up. So I'd recommend January, February for most people around here in Georgia. And then you need a rain event of about a half inch to an inch to move the product into the first quarter inch of the soil you hope, because most of these products are really watering solid. And then you'll get about at least 8 to 12 weeks weed control where it will interact with any germinating seeds that prevent them from becoming an issue. + +Most emerging herbicides are applied anytime after the seeds have germinated and they need a certain period of dryness after the application. For example, a product like glyphosate or Roundup, you might be very familiar with. You'd apply that, spray that on a plant leaf or a plant, it would dry and then be absorbed into the plant. With glyphosate it's a phloem-loaded product which moves around the entire plant system, which is, we don't have very many of those. And it would control the plant by cutting down the production of three amino acids. And that would be the two differences. + +But some herbicides actually work, can work as a pre and post-emergent herbicide. But there's plenty like glyphosate, which only is a post-emergent herbicide. And if you spray it on the ground, it's inactivated immediately because it falls to the soil particles and come off until it falls off as carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen. + +This is just a quick shot of what most of the seeds that germinate, we have a seed bank, anything less than about a quarter inch of soil, most of those seeds are in what we call seed bank. Anything above quarter inch in this plant that could be actively germinate and grow. Most of the pre-emergent herbicides you apply and when we get a rate of that, they move or migrate in that top quarter inch of the soil where the germinating seeds, where the hypocotyl usually comes out first and then the radicle comes out. And then they can get absorbed on either the hypocotyl or the radicle and absorb a couple of herbicide molecules. And then those herbicides cause usually problems. There's some biopathway that inhibit the plant from growing well and allow the other plants to grow, canopy over, and eventually these plants will die because they just can't grow. It's what you hope. Sometimes they can linger for quite a while. + +As far as the pre and post-emergent herbicides, we have selective and non-selective herbicides. Selective herbicides control a certain group of plants that are safe like 2,4-D and then a non-selective group like Roundup where they control everything they come in contact with. So you should remember that. + +And then just some examples of ones like we got Preen, which is a pre-emergent herbicide. There's a couple of different versions of it. The regular Preen was just trifluralin. Preen Southern, which you might be familiar with, has dithiopyr, which I think is one of the most underused herbicide, pre-emergent herbicides on the market. And then we got, of course, Roundup, which is the post-emergent herbicide Roundup, which has gained a lot of notoriety because of some of the court cases. And then we have one called SedgeHammer or ProSedge, if you're familiar with those, which can kill nutsedge that's emerged, but it can also have some pre-emergent weed control on even nutsedge and a lot of annual weeds coming from seed. + +--- + +## Herbicide Formulations + +**Mark Czarnota:** But anyway, the formulations of herbicides are made to be applied as dry, as granular. So they either put the herbicide on a granular and it's usually on a piece of, it's either kaolinitic clay or it's on biodeck, which is newspaper, or it's meant to be formulated and applied with water as a carrier most of the time or as a liquid. So you can either create, the formulations are created to be applied dry as a granular, be a sprayable or a use of water as a carrier. And sprayables can be a concentrate that's either a liquid or a dry. So either one of those could be, you know, it just depends on chemical manufacturer and what's the best way to formulate that product is what I can tell you. + +--- + +## Trade Names, Active Ingredients, and Cost Savings + +**Mark Czarnota:** And then just as an example, the trade name would be Roundup. The active ingredient would be glyphosate, the full chemical name. If you want to know exactly how to draw a molecule, you would use that chemical name. And then you could learn a lot about that molecule's charge and activity and whatnot by knowing that. But what I'm most interested myself in is the active ingredient or common chemical name. If that product tells me it's glyphosate and I know the formulation, I always look on there and tell you how many pounds per gallon. If it's a four-pound gallon, I know exactly how much to put out. I get decent weed control most of the way, and I can make that information. + +I used to get a lot of questions on — I was on this glyphosate product that works real well, and it's half the cost of regular Roundup. It works great, and I tell people to use it. But if you can arm yourself to start looking at what the active ingredient is, you can save a lot of money. I guess is what I'm trying to get across, because it's just the same way with like designer clothes and things like that. Once the product comes off patent, a lot of people start to make it and it's the same product and just in a different container for the same uses that you might be utilizing before. So that's something to keep track of. + +--- + +## Herbicide Modes of Action + +**Mark Czarnota:** As far as the modes of action, it's real important for some people to understand this because you cannot understand how the product is, realize it, maybe the safety of it to you and whatnot. But for example, glyphosate, it inhibits what we call the EPSP synthase pathway, which is production of three amino acids. So it's tryptophan, phenylalanine, and tyrosine. You might not know about that pathway or the amino acids, but the important thing to remember is those amino acids, we have to eat those to get those. We don't have that pathway in our body. And this is what makes glyphosate so, one of the reasons it's so non-toxic to us in the environment, because no animals have that pathway. So it works on a pathway that's not even in our bodies. + +And then as far as the mechanisms by which plants detoxify these herbicides, that's sometimes called a mode of action too. And for example, a lot of people want to know why 2,4-D is not, it doesn't hurt grasses. And it's mainly because there's several ways plants actually detoxify that herbicide. But there's this one called NIH shift, which basically means that the plant has an enzyme system that can gobble up that 2,4-D molecule and change where the actual chlorine groups are on the molecule and inactivate it. That's what the grasses do. One of the ways the grasses deactivate that herbicide. So it's quite fascinating. + +But what I understand these modes of action, like I mentioned, is how to use the herbicides, better understanding of how they perform, diagnosis of herbicide injury, make you sound like you know what you're doing in public. You can explain this information to the public and try to make them less scared of it. + +### Dinitroaniline Herbicides + +**Mark Czarnota:** Some of the ones that you might really be understand or help you to understand is the herbicides would be the dinitroaniline herbicides. You might be from everything because they're colored. They're either orange or yellow. And Treflan, which would be one, pendimethalin, Surflan, benefin, and Barricade would be ones that are in this mode of action. And they cause what we call microtubule disruption. And that's actually when the cells go to divide in a plant, the chromosomes go to two different, they'll divide and then they'll get pulled two different ends of the cells. And those organs that pull the chromosomes apart and make them equal on both sides of the cell are called microtubules. This herbicide binds onto there and prevents them from happening and or messes this whole system up and plant can't lay what's called cell plate down and make another cell basically. And that's why you see this club rooting on the left on the corn that you see, and this happens a lot in growers fields that they put somebody in a previous crop put too high of a rate of one of these herbicides down and this can cause big problems. + +But anyway, they're mainly used as pre-emergent herbicides to the backbone of the ornamental industry still. And they can also change ploidy numbers. They have to spray a high rate on the plant and try to get ploidy number to change. If you're a breeder and can change chromosome number basically, because the plants can't, the chromosomes will get doubled a lot of times because the cells will pull apart and that cell that becomes stuffed, you can get a different plant to come off of that if you grow tissue culture or it can even come out of some different shoots sometimes. But it's interesting. + +--- + +## Pre-Emergent Herbicides for Landscape and Nursery + +**Mark Czarnota:** These are all the herbicides that are available to the landscape industry, these are all the pre's that are available and I could talk and bully to death about all these but I'm not going to do that. And anyway, Surflan is one you might be familiar with, this one has come off — it didn't come off the market, the last plant that manufactured it actually blew up. It's unavailable to the growers today or it's what you can find on the market, so you can get — it's pretty much gone. + +A couple you might want to know is Dimension is one of the ones that's one of the least utilized herbicides, needs to be utilized more in the landscape and turf industry because you can spray this in most turfgrasses on most landscape situations, pretty much all the broad woody ornamentals, there are even some perennials and annuals you can use this product on. It works very well. And I'm very impressed with it. + +Broadstar or flumioxazin is one that's really good. As far as it comes in, this is granular formulation. There are also a sprayable formulation called SureGuard. And then Marengo and Specticle is a indaziflam. This is probably one of those best products I've tested, but it's mainly for just the woody ornamentals, established woody ornamentals. But you can get upwards of 16 weeks of pre-emergent weed control out of this product. + +And of course, isoxaben is a great product if you do sprays, but if you spray this, you can spray it with a product called Pennant and get really safe weed control on very young material and lots of perennials and annuals. So anyway, but these are all pre-emergent herbicides and pretty much all of them are available for use of container or shield-grown ornamentals or landscape uses. + +--- + +## Post-Emergent and Selective Herbicides + +**Mark Czarnota:** And these are post-emergent herbicides, just as I switch gears, these are the ones that are available for the post-emergent control where you can use them. And you can see for non-selective herbicides, we have Reward, Finale, Glyphosate, Roundup, Goal, and Scythe. And the only one of these products that's actually systemic and will move around and plant and kill it is Glyphosate. So it's a real important herbicide for us. + +The grass herbicides, you might be familiar. These are just products, grass products, these burn down emerged grasses, and they cause control of the grass. And so they work real well, controlling emerged grasses. And then as far as selective weed control, we hardly have anything. So that's why it's so important to control things pre-emergingly from seed. + +But we have Basagran and product Image, which is still, you can find it difficult to find, but those two products used to be used to control yellow nutsedge and purple nutsedge. Basagran controlled yellow, Image controlled purple. And that's the main reason we had those products. They do control some other weeds. And then of course, when SedgeHammer came out of ProSedge, that pretty much eliminated the need for Basagran and Image. But that controls yellow nutsedge and purple nutsedge fairly well in turfgrass situations. That also is post-directed application in the landscape situation. And so is Certainty. It's like that also. + +And then of course, Garlon is utilized. I put this one in here because it's in the Brush-B-Gon products that a lot of people had a hold of for controlling brush. You can paint this product on a stem like an oak or a pine that's coming up in your landscape bed and it'll keep it from emerging and just cut it off and you don't have to dig it out. + +And then that's pretty much all we have. + +--- + +## Combination Granular Herbicides + +**Mark Czarnota:** As far as the combo herbicides, these are granular herbicides you might be familiar with, but these products are used as pre-emergent herbicide. Some of them have a product called oxyfluorfen in it, and this product naturally will prevent when the seeds germinate, if it's not beyond the two to three leaf stage, you can use these products to have oxyfluorfen in it that will prevent or burn down the germinated weeds and also have a good pre-emergent herbicide like, for example, an OH2 and pendimethalin. And they give you a good eight to ten weeks of weed control in that container. And these are mainly used by container growers. Most of these could be used in the landscape, but most of the sales are container people. + +And the most popular one is probably for a long time, Snapshot. And it's because of safety, as isoxaben and trifluralin, it's very safe in use and a lot of plant material. But these are great products. And you utilize all these products, too, I should tell you, from 100 to 200 pounds per acre. + +But anyway, a lot of people ask me about annual and perennial weed control. But of those products, I just listed, Cancel, Snapshot, XL, FreeHand, Treflan are very good but I would highly recommend Snapshot, XL, and FreeHand are three, they're really good. The only problem is XL has a oryzalin that's going to be around once, once all the stock is used up. + +As I mentioned about Surflan, hopefully AMVAC is going to make some agreement with China to try to come back. That's basically where we're going to head. And the earliest will be available, it'll be late 23 now. That's not going to happen anytime next year. + +And then alternatives for Surflan would be Pennant Magnum. I would use it from 20 to 42 ounces per acre. And you can do up to 67.2 ounces per year. And it's a re-entry interval of 24 hours. And you can tank mix it with Simazine or Gallery for really good broad-spectrum weed control. + +--- + +## Recommended Products: Marengo, BroadStar, SureGuard + +**Mark Czarnota:** Anyway, I'm going to skip. So I'm going to try to fly through this year, but the new herbicides that are out there, Marengo came out about three years ago now. And a lot of people still don't know about it, but you can use it in landscape. And if you're growing ornamentals in either containers or in the ground, that is a product you need to try. And any share of a landscape situation, I'd highly recommend. + +But also Broadstar is another great one, which is a granular form, but you can buy. The sprayable form is called SureGuard. And then, of course, I always spray the Snapshot, FreeHand, I mentioned to you about the safe weed control. Safety, desirable plants can get fairly decent weed control. + +And just a slide, you can see Marengo 16 weeks after treatment, a pecan study I had out, how great it works. The only thing that would be problems here, if you had nutsedge, it would not control nutsedge and that Marengo would fall apart. + +Just some sprays you might be interested in, Gallery, of course with Surflan, if you can still get it, Barricade, Pendulum, Marengo, and SureGuard, they can stand all by themselves. And be a great product and get weed control from 10 to somewhere between 12 and 16 weeks, even in South Georgia. + +Just a picture of a slide. When you're using pre-emergent herbicides, this would be just when I was looking at a product called Tower and I'd put weeds in the pot. It was a sabal palm. We control, you could imagine weeding out an acre of ornamentals like this. It's going to cost you about $1,200 to $1,600 an acre to pull weeds out of one gallon pots on an acre. And I can easily do a weed control for less than $200. You don't have to do that about three or four times a year, which would, if you had hand weed, you'd do that probably two or three times a year, which you'd go bankrupt trying to keep yourself in business. + +--- + +## Best Practices and Common Application Errors + +**Mark Czarnota:** Just good things to remember is good weed control doesn't happen by accident and will not last and takes time. You never get 100% weed control with a single application on pre or post herbicide. You're always going to have to go do some hand weeding or some post-directed applications of herbicides. But you need to think about what you're trying to control and have some plan that you're trying to attack stuff. + +And this time of year is great because you get a reset. We'll get a frost to kill all the annual weeds. And that gives you a little time to adjust, get some herbicides if you need them or make a plan of getting some mulch down and using it maybe some herbicides in combination to try to get rid of some problematic weeds. I mean, you know that there's, for example, if you have a lot of chamber bitters, like I showed you a picture of, you could get a pre-emergent herbicide like Dimension or Marengo down during that timeframe. So if you put it down, maybe an application in January, February, and again in April, May, you're going to have pretty good weed control of those problematic weeds. + +I'd love to have a selected post-emergent herbicide for every weed we have, see it and treat it, but that's not reality. But currently the best way to control weeds is with pre-herbicides. And then granules do provide poor control of the sprays, but are much safer. And people often ask me why do they have so many different formulations? But the granulars will fall through the canopy of the plant, hit the ground. And then when you get a rain event, they ooze out from those granulars and then give you weed control. But sprays come in contact right with the plant, which increases the possibilities of damage. But sprays are always cheaper to get the same amount of active ingredients just because the fact that most granulars are 2% active, but sprays can be, the bottle you get, can it be upwards of 90% active. + +Some errors I see: no rain after pre-herbicide applications, rained after post-herbicide applications, poorly calibrated equipment, poor choices in herbicides, and using a pre-herbicide after most of those weeds have germinated. Most pre-herbicides aren't going to give you control with that. + +And then if you're doing field applications, I do two to four applications a year. If you're doing container weed control, you're going to have to do about four to six applications a year. With pre-herbicides, try to use at least two different products. But if you use the combo herbicides, this really is a problem. And make sure you have a rain event after you put a pre-herbicide on. When you get in that May, April, May area here in Georgia, sometimes we don't get any rain. And you put a pre-herbicide down and you don't get any range within 72 hours, you're going to start losing weed control with that product. + +And then also two to four inch layer of mulch, like I mentioned, is a great pre-emergent herbicide. In a case situations, once the plants can be, herbicides or applications should be rare at that point. But you can just come back and do just manually pull the weeds out or do a post-directed application or even paint a product like glyphosate on a blackberry or something to get rid of it. Those are things that you can do to get rid of stuff. + +--- + +## Glyphosate Application and Safety Data + +**Mark Czarnota:** And then anyway, as far as only spray glyphosate on a live growing plant material, you don't apply glyphosate solution to the trunk of base of thin bark trees and the herbicide applications need to be dry, need to dry before rain, otherwise it's not going to work well. And glyphosate, remember, is the only broad spectrum herbicide. + +And this is just a slide here of all where you can get the actual MSDS sheets or the safety data sheets, SDS sheets, they call them now. And then, or the labels, but this, the CDMS.net probably has 80% of all the pesticides you might come in contact with. Otherwise, you're going to have to get contact a manufacturer's website to find it if you want to get it. + +--- + +## Herbicide Fate, Half-Lives, and Organic Options + +**Mark Czarnota:** And then a lot of people want to know where herbicides go when they break down, but most of them actually bond to, they're absorbed by the clay or organic matter and hang out until they break down. That's usually what happens to them. And if you're interested in seeing how long they, the half-life of them, which is how long it takes to go if we extract the soil to see the original amount to half of what we put out — a lot of people might be interested in this. Glyphosate takes about 50 days to break to get about half of what you put down to go. And then you probably need two or three half-lives until you can't get it. And you couldn't extract it anymore. But 2,4-D is about 10. Post herbicides about five. And glufosinate might be, right, whether it's only about seven days. It breaks down very quickly. + +So on the organic products that are out there, they're all burned down products. And the last time I checked, which is less than a year ago, there was acetic acid, all the these, one, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight, burned down type products that are either oils or acids. And then you also pre-emergent, the only pre-emergent herbicide we have is corn gluten, put it down at about 2,000 pounds an acre, which obviously is not useful here, but it could be useful if you're working out in Iowa where they produce a lot of corn. + +--- + +## Glyphosate: Formulations, Safety Research, and Damage Symptoms + +**Mark Czarnota:** And then glyphosate, lots of new formulations that keep coming out, if it's a four-pound gallon or the 41% active, you use it between a quarter of a 10% solution, but 2% kill almost everything. If you're wicking it on, you want to use 25 to 50% and then stuff. She can use a 50 or a hundred percent solution to kill weeds. + +And then I don't, I'm going to go, I'm not going to go through this, but let's say basically came under scrutiny and it's still a problem. There's lots of lawsuits out there has settled with them. I think, but, a lot of people asked me if glyphosate is safe. They found out there was, in 2017, the Journal of the National Cancer Institute reviewed glyphosate of 44,932 licensed applicators of glyphosate, North Carolina, Iowa, 5,779 indicate incidents of cancer were out of these 44,000 were noted, but it's no different than the national average background actually of people getting cancer. So there's really no association between glyphosate and any solid tumor or lymphoid malignancies overall is what they concluded. And a lot of people ask me, is glyphosate safe? It's a registered product. It goes under heavy scrutiny from the US EPA and European EPA for human toxicity, environmental impact. And if used correctly, the evidence is that glyphosate is not likely to cause issues with us. + +So anyway, if you're interested in that, and if you spray continually like glyphosate on the base of crape myrtles, it's kind of damaging. We call it bud blasting. And if you have glyphosate mixed in your tank, there's a picture of hydrangea below guys showing you the difference in the bud. But this will be an example of the guy above, holding it, this would be a sublethal dose, plant still comes out, looks terrible and people want to ask me how long is it going to take for that plant to come out. The picture of the crape myrtle on the left, it needs to be torn out, replanted. The picture of the hydrangea on the bottom, if you prune that back, it'd probably come back in probably two months. + +--- + +## Adjuvants and Stump Control + +**Mark Czarnota:** And then anyway, the surfactants, just make sure if you have to use a surfactant or an adjuvant is what the umbrella is, that you use it. You can decrease activity from 20 to 40% if you're not using an adjuvant when you need to. + +And then people often ask about stump control. Don't forget you can apply glyphosate as a paint, selectively apply it so you don't have to spray it. And keep it away, but you could paint glyphosate on a, for example, or a triclopyr on a piece of, and that'll kill that plant. 90% of the time, that thing's not even going to re-bud. If it re-buds, it's not going to be happy. + +--- + +## Emerging Technologies + +**Mark Czarnota:** And, but there's lots of new stuff going on. And impregnated mulches were released back in 2012 with gly... They actually have Surflan on, you can buy them, and I've seen them available at Home Depot on Lowe's. There's going to be better herbicide formulations, vehicles for slow release herbicides. Our common target is targeting weeds with herbicides. That I could see being a big issue. There's laser machines out now. And I showed you a picture of the mechanical picker. + +And that's all I have. I'm sorry I lost you. I would have been a little bit slower. But anyway, does anybody have any questions? + +**Shimat Joseph:** Do you have time? I'd be happy to answer. + +--- + +## Questions and Answers + +**Shimat Joseph:** Thank you so much, Mark. Is it, anybody has any questions, please, you can use the Q&A box and type it there. And I can ask. It looks like we have a question. + +### Torpedograss Control + +**Shimat Joseph:** So this is from Robert, asking, having a difficult time with torpedograss, what would you recommend to control? + +**Mark Czarnota:** Okay. I guess you had, I guess I can repeat the question. Guy has trouble with torpedograss. Oh, that's a great question. And I have an answer for you. I don't know what it's growing in, but there's a product actually called Drive that works really well on torpedograss. And you, Drive is not labeled yet for use in overtop ornamentals, but we're working on a label for that or that we're, I don't know where it got to, but we actually got it for weed control in blueberries and blackberry, but it does control torpedograss very well. And I don't know if that would be an option for you. I don't know where it's growing in turfgrass or in ornamentals. + +But I've done some studies with it at the university here. The product Drive, quinclorac, you would have known. It's fairly safe on most woody type ornamentals. But again, it's not labeled. You'd have to do experiments yourself to decide. It wouldn't be a label application. You'd have to just try it out and see how it works and then hopefully we get a label for it. + +### Virginia Buttonweed Control + +**Shimat Joseph:** We have time for one more question. I think the other question that popped up is a control of Virginia buttonweed in turfgrass. Do you have any other conditions? + +**Mark Czarnota:** Yeah, buttonweed, I don't do turfgrass, buttonweed, weed control, most of the time you can use — it depends on the turfgrass variety, but you can use atrazine or there's a couple other of the products like Revolver or Manor or Monument. They have some activity on that plant. It's a very difficult plant to control in turfgrass. And even if you get it creeping into the landscape bed, which often happens, it can be difficult. + +But, you know, in turfgrass, atrazine is probably the cheapest way to go. If you do probably two applications of a quart per acre each time, if you use the four pound gallon. But anyway, Patrick would be McCullough, Dr. McCullough, or I call him Patrick or he can call him Pat too, I'm sure. But he does turfgrass weed control, but that's a big perennial problem. And that's a plant too that sometimes over winters, as we get global warming, you know, a lot of these plants that sometimes aren't, are just annuals are starting to be perennial because they're not getting killed back. And that's one I'm saying starting to make it through South Georgia winters. But atrazine, again, for turfgrass would be probably the cheapest route if you've got Bermuda or zoysia or turfgrass that atrazine can help. + +### Bermudagrass Control in Ornamentals + +**Shimat Joseph:** I will take one more question. So this is from, what is your recommendation for selective control of bermudagrass in ornamentals? + +**Mark Czarnota:** Okay, that's another great question. When you, anytime you have bermudagrass creeping into your ornamentals, I really tell people probably the best product that, that I, that's out there currently that gives you the best activity — but there really isn't much difference between all the grass herbicides — it would be the clethodim or the Envoy product. That one works really well and it'll beat back the bermudagrass probably for a, old for you, you probably get three, four months before you have to do a retreat. + +And basically, for example, if you have junipers and bermudagrass creeping into it, that's a really good option to do that. You just spray that band where the bermudagrass is meeting with junipers and it'll do a good job of keeping that back. But any of them work okay. We would have Segment, Envoy, Fusilade, which would be DX, and you can buy that as GraspiGuard also. Those three products all work fairly well. But clethodim probably gives you about 10%, 15% better activity, if I had to tell you that, from what I've seen. + +But Glyphosate works really well if you get the rates high enough. But of course, you can't use that selectively like you can't in the grass herbicide. So if you spray that over top, [laughing] you're not going to be happy. It'll kill both the bermudagrass and any desirable plant that you want. But that's a great question. That's often a big question, I guess. + +--- + +## Closing + +**Shimat Joseph:** Yeah, Mark, it looks like we have more questions popping in, but I would say we need to wind up now for the next speaker. + +**Mark Czarnota:** All right, I'm sorry. I'm sorry it dropped me. I'm on a satellite at home. I'm on a satellite at home, Shimat, so sometimes that happens. And I'm going to update my computer this weekend. Yeah. So I have a much better video card. So anyway, that's good. Thanks for having me. Hopefully, thank you so much. + +**Shimat Joseph:** Thank you so much for the presentation today. Okay. + +**Mark Czarnota:** Okay. And they can give them my email and I could try to answer their questions if they want to. I guess you'll give them that. + +**Rich Braman:** Nice. Right. Yeah, we can do that. Anyone who didn't get a chance to have their question passed to Mark, if you go ahead and follow up with him in email and we can pass that out today at the end. Just go ahead and do that. + +**Shimat Joseph:** So we give day— + +**Rich Braman:** Thanks for help Richie too, I appreciate that. You bet. All right folks, we're going to go ahead and jump to break now for just a little bit under five minutes. Thank you Mark, have a good day. + +--- + +*Transcript processed for UGA Center for Urban Agriculture / GTBOP Archives* +*Source: Corrected SRT (Stage 1) — GTBOP_Transcript_2021-11-18_WeedControl.srt (786 blocks)* diff --git a/docs/green-commercial/index.md b/docs/green-commercial/index.md index d7eaec0..f139fa8 100644 --- a/docs/green-commercial/index.md +++ b/docs/green-commercial/index.md @@ -14,6 +14,7 @@ Webinar archives for commercial and private pesticide applicators in the ornamen | Date | Speaker | Topic | Stages | |------|---------|-------|--------| | Nov 17, 2017 | [Dr. Patrick McCullough](2017-11-17-mccullough-weed-control/index.md) | Weed Control in Turf | 1–5 | +| Nov 18, 2021 | [Dr. Mark Czarnota](2021-11-18-czarnota-weed-control/index.md) | Weed Control in Landscape & Nursery | 1–5 | | Jan 15, 2026 | [Dr. Ignazio Graziosi](2026-01-15-graziosi-tree-pests/index.md) | Tree Pests | 1–5 | | Jan 15, 2026 | [Dr. Ryan Klein](2026-01-15-klein-urban-tree-bmps/index.md) | Urban Tree BMPs | 1–5 | diff --git a/mkdocs.yml b/mkdocs.yml index 6a5837b..e88fc61 100644 --- a/mkdocs.yml +++ b/mkdocs.yml @@ -87,6 +87,21 @@ nav: - Corrected SRT: green-commercial/2017-11-17-mccullough-weed-control/downloads.md - Processing Log: green-commercial/2017-11-17-mccullough-weed-control/processing-log.md + # ── November 18, 2021 ── + - "Czarnota — Weed Control in Landscape & Nursery (Nov 2021)": + - green-commercial/2021-11-18-czarnota-weed-control/index.md + - Archive Summary: green-commercial/2021-11-18-czarnota-weed-control/archive-summary.md + - Prose Transcript: green-commercial/2021-11-18-czarnota-weed-control/prose-transcript.md + - Transcript Corrections: green-commercial/2021-11-18-czarnota-weed-control/corrections.md + - Platform Versions: + - YouTube: green-commercial/2021-11-18-czarnota-weed-control/platforms/youtube.md + - Website: green-commercial/2021-11-18-czarnota-weed-control/platforms/website.md + - Extension Agent: green-commercial/2021-11-18-czarnota-weed-control/platforms/ext-agent.md + - Moodle Activities: + - Quiz: green-commercial/2021-11-18-czarnota-weed-control/activities/quiz.md + - Matching: green-commercial/2021-11-18-czarnota-weed-control/activities/matching.md + - Processing Log: green-commercial/2021-11-18-czarnota-weed-control/processing-log.md + # ── January 15, 2026 ── - "Graziosi — Tree Pests (Jan 2026)": - green-commercial/2026-01-15-graziosi-tree-pests/index.md