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Hairy Crabweed

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Publication Number: P3204
View as PDF: P3204.pdf
hairy crabweed seedlings (left), mature hairy crabweed (center), flower clusters in leaf axils (right)

Hairy crabweed (Fatoua villosa), also known as mulberryweed, is an introduced annual in the mulberry family. Hairy crabweed is native to East Asia and was likely introduced to Louisiana around 1964. Other reports indicate that it escaped around New Orleans in the 1950s, perhaps by contaminated equipment brought back to the United States after World War II. Compared with other invasive plants, hairy crabweed is a fairly recent introduction, yet it occurs over much of the United States today. Hairy crabweed seems to avoid detection often until it is well established on a site. This is possibly because of its similar appearance to seedling mulberry trees. In addition, plants can produce seedlings around 1 inch tall, making it difficult to detect while it becomes established.


Description

With the common name of mulberryweed, hairy crabweed is similar in appearance to mulberry trees but with notable differences. Hairy crabweed is an annual whose mature height is highly variable. There have been reports that hairy crabweed is a perennial under greenhouse conditions. Plants will produce seed anywhere from around 1 inch to 3 feet or more. Seedling cotyledons are rounded with an apical notch. True leaves are alternate with serrated margins, rather large, and triangular to cordate in shape. Plants are hairy—including leaves and stems. Plants produce a taproot, and stems are round, ranging from green to reddish in color.

Flowers grow in 1-inch clusters on short stems in the axils of the leaves. Flower clusters range from green to purplish and fade to brown with age. Flowers lack petals. Seeds are small (about 1 millimeter), tan, and oval. Some seeds are forcibly ejected (explosive dehiscence) and can be thrown up to 4 feet as a form of natural dispersal. Seeds germinate in warm weather (60–100°F), maturing within 12 days after reaching the two-leaf stage. This maturity rate makes eradication difficult without persistent monitoring of the site.

 

Habitat

Hairy crabweed plants prefer moist areas in sun or shade, but mostly in shade. Landowners purchasing nursery plants should be cautious. Even though hairy crabweed may not be visible in the container, seeds may be in the soil. Seeds can be thrown into containers by nearby plants and go unnoticed until they germinate. Once in a suitable habitat in the landscape, it will proliferate without eradication. Hairy crabweed adapts to a wide range of habitats, including sun to shade and wet to moderately moist soils. Habitat resources often determine how large the plant will grow, but it tends to produce seed over a wide range of plant sizes—this ensures its persistence on a wide range of habitats.

Hairy crabweed has a wetland indicator status of facultative (it can occur in wetlands). It can be very problematic in moist woodlands by outcompeting certain native species, including rare woodland species growing on moist woodland bluffs. However, hairy crabweed does not invade, establish, and persist in dry environments.

 

Control Methods

Cultural

Since hairy crabgrass weed is adapted to a wide range of habitats, most cultural controls are not effective. Hairy crabweed seeds require light for germination, so landscape fabric or thick mulch layers may help reduce hairy crabweed emergence in landscape beds. Another option is to kill the weed with fire using a flame weeder, such as the Red Dragon.

 

Mechanical

Mowing hairy crabweed is often ineffective or increases the problem. Plants can flower and produce seed at a very small size, easily missed with a mower. If mowing cuts a young stem, it may branch below the cut and produce seed. Digging or pulling plants up with the taproot is effective. When pulling up the plants, minimize your disturbance if they are in flower. Disturbance can cause seed to disperse. In addition, mature plants should be placed in a bag or closed container to prevent seed dispersal as the plants are moved. Do not dump mature plants in other areas of the landscape since seeds can cause more problems at the new area.

 

Chemical

See Table 1 for recommended herbicides. Preemergence herbicides must be applied and activated (watered into soil) before seed germination for effective control. Consult herbicide labels to verify that ornamentals or turf can tolerate herbicide before applying it. All postemergence herbicides listed are nonselective. These products will damage other ornamentals if spray solution contacts desirable plants. Triclopyr can be absorbed by plant roots and can vaporize after applications to damage desirable plants. Nonionic surfactant should be added to postemergence herbicides at the rate of 32 ounces per 100 gallons spray mix. Some glyphosate products contain surfactant in the formulated product and, therefore, do not require additional surfactant.

 

Table 1. Chemical control for hairy crabweed.

Herbicide

Trade name/Formulation

Method

Rate

Preemergence

Flumioxazin

Broadstar
0.25%

soil

150 lb/A

Dimethenamid + Pendimethalin

Freehand
1.75%

soil

100 to 200 lb/A

Indaziflam

Specticle, Esplanade, etc.
0.62 lb ai/gallon
20%

soil

 

 

6 to 12 fl oz/A

3.75 to 5 oz/A

Isoxaben

Gallery 75% or
4.16 lb ai/gallon

soil

0.67 to 1.3 oz/A

16 to 31 fl oz/A

Isoxaben + Prodiamine

Gemini
3.74 lbs ai/gallon

soil

44 to 87 fl oz/A

Oxyfluorfen

Goal, etc.
2 lb ai/gallon

soil

80 to 160 fl oz/A

Oxyfluorfen + Pendimethalin

OH2
3%

soil

100 lb/A

Oxyfluorfen + Oxadiazon

Regal 00
3%

soil

100 lb/A

Oxyfluorfen + Prodiamine

Biathlon
2.75%

soil

100 lb/A

Oxyfluorfen + Oryzalin

Route
3%

soil

100 lb/A

Oryzalin

Surfian
4 lb ai/gallon

soil

64 to 128 fl oz/A

Postemergence

Glyphosate

Roundup, etc.
3 lb ae/gallon

foliar spot
foliar broadcast

2 fl oz/gallon water
32 oz/A

Glufosinate

Finale, etc.
3 lb ae/gallon

foliar spot
foliar broadcast

2 to 3 fl oz/gallon water
96 to 128 oz/A

Triclopyr

Turflon, etc.
4 lbs ae/gallon

foliar spot
foliar broadcast

2% solution
24 fl oz/A

 

References

Neal, J. C., J. Williams-Woodward, & J. C. Chong. 2017. 2017 Southeastern U.S. Pest Control Guide for Nursery Crops and Landscape Plantings. Online at https://content.ces.ncsu.edu/southeastern-us-pest-control-guide-for-nursery-crops-and-landscape-plantings. Accessed 20 October 2017.

USDA, NRCS. 2007. The PLANTS Database. National Plant Data Center, Baton Rouge, LA 70874-4490 USA. Online resource at http://plants.usda.gov. Accessed 27 June 2007.

 

Publication 3204 (POD-03-18)

By John Byrd Jr., PhD, Extension/Research Professor, Plant and Soil Sciences, and Victor Maddox, PhD, Senior Research Associate, Plant and Soil Sciences.
 
Department: Plant and Soil Sciences
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Authors

Portrait of Dr. John D. Byrd, Jr.
Extension/Research Professor
Weed Scientist/Weed Control - Agronomic and Horticultural Crops and noncropland

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Portrait of Dr. Wes Neal
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