Canada Thistle Alert!

Canada Thistle: A Very Prickly Problem in Row Crop Ground

 

 

By Rachel Freeman Long, UCANR Farm Advisor, Field Crops

A very spiny plant was dropped off at my office here in Woodland, CA that turned out to be Canada thistle, a noxious weed.

This plant is commonly found in the Intermountain area in northern California where it has overtaken fields, but my first encounter here in the Sacramento Valley. It was found in row crop ground and the landowner was having trouble controlling it. He cut it 6-in below ground, but it resprouted and grew back more shoots. He spot-sprayed it with glyphosate and 2,4D, but the plants recovered (likely burned back the plants before good translocation happened).

 

Canada Thistle overtaking a ditch bank in Intermountain area of CA

Canada thistle is difficult to control because it is a perennial plant with a deep taproot (Photo 6). It also has the ability to spread by the root forming dense patches in agricultural land or natural areas. Like other rhizomatous perennial weeds, tillage can break up Canada thistle roots into fragments spreading them thought a field making patches larger! Herbicides are typically needed to kill the deep extensive roots of the plants.

Canada thistle spot sprayed with Glyphosate and 2,4 D

In rangelands research has shown that Canada thistle control can be achieved with applications of Milestone (aminopyralid); Stinger/Transline (clopyralid) can offer suppression. However, both of these herbicides have a very long residual activity restricting what can be planted into a treated area after application. There are few options for controlling Canada thistle in row crop ground. One can rogue it, but one has to be sure to pull up the entire root or it will regrow. One can also spray with glyphosate in the fall when Canada thistle is translocating carbohydrates down to the roots. A spring application when Canada thistle is actively growing in the bud stage is the next best time to hit it with glyphosate, but that is not possible if a crop is planted. Multiple years of treatment with glyphosate are often needed to eradicate a thick patch once established.

Canada thistle regrowing from a root that was cut 6-inches underground

Canada thistle also needs to be actively growing at time of application for good herbicide translocation. Dust on the leaves can also affect the application (watch for all that ash that was deposited on plants this year from the fires). If one is making a spot treatment be sure that the glyphosate concentration in the backpack sprayer isn’t too high or you’ll likely get burn back but less translocation down to the root and less control. A slow death is generally desired for those deep-rooted noxious weeds (and perhaps more satisfying!)

Keep this weed out of your fields!

Canada thistle is a prohibited weed in certified seed production, so check your fields regularly and keep it out. Don’t let it get established! The California Crop Improvement Association (CCIA) charged with certifying seed fields states the following: “We have a zero tolerance for prohibited weeds in any class of certified fields. If the grower does not remove the plants from the field, then that field is automatically rejected, no matter the stage of said plant.”

Other troublesome thistle species commonly found in the Sacramento Valley include Italian thistle (Carduus pycnocephalus) and slenderflower thistle (Carduus tenuiflorus); see the UC IPM resources below. Both Italian and slenderflower thistles are annual, or sometimes biennial species, different than Canada thistle which is a perennial. Additionally, we created Table 1 comparing key common traits to help with identification of these three thistle species. Both Italian and slenderflower thistles are classified as restricted weeds. CCIA states, “For restricted weeds there can be a number of those plants in the field. However, if any of the restricted weed seeds are found in the seed analysis then the lot is rejected.”

Tomas Getts, and Jose Carvalho de Souza Dias assisted Long in writing this report.