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Weed Management Practices for Organic Production of Trailing Blackberry: I. Plant Growth and Early Fruit Production

ScholarsArchive at Oregon State University

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Title Weed Management Practices for Organic Production of Trailing Blackberry: I. Plant Growth and Early Fruit Production
Names Harkins, Renee H. (creator)
Strik, Bernadine C. (creator)
Bryla, David R. (creator)
Date Issued 2013-09 (iso8601)
Note To the best of our knowledge, one or more authors of this paper were federal employees when contributing to this work. This is the publisher’s final pdf. The published article is copyrighted by the American Society for Horticultural Science and can be found at: http://hortsci.ashspublications.org/.
Abstract Weed management practices were evaluated in a new field of trailing
blackberry (Rubus L. subgenus Rubus Watson) established in western Oregon. The field
was planted in May 2010 and certified organic in May 2012. Treatments included two
cultivars, Marion and Black Diamond, grown in 1) non-weeded plots, where weeds were
cut to the ground just before harvest; 2) hand-weeded plots, hoed two to three times per
year; and 3) weed mat plots, covered with black landscape fabric. Each treatment was
fertilized with fish emulsion and irrigated by drip. Weeds increased from 2010 through
2012 in both non-weeded and hand-weeded plots and required 38 and 90 h·ha⁻¹ of labor
to remove the weeds in the latter treatment in 2011 and 2012, respectively. Weeds in weed
mat plots, in comparison, were confined primarily to the planting holes in the fabric and
required only 1 h·ha⁻¹ of labor for weed removal each year. Blackberry growth, in terms
of number and dry weight of the primocanes, was similar among treatments during the
first year after planting but differed with cultivar and weed management the next season.
In 2011, ‘Black Diamond’ produced shorter but an average of three more primocanes per
plant than ‘Marion’, whereas plants in hand-weeded and weed mat plots produced nearly
twice as many primocanes as non-weeded plots. Hence, when fruit were produced on
floricanes (the previous year’s primocanes) for the first time in 2012, ‘Black Diamond’
had 15% more yield than ‘Marion’, and weed control increased yield by 67% with hand-weeding
and 100% with weed mat, on average. ‘Black Diamond’ and weed control also
produced larger berries (measured as average individual fruit weight) with a greater
water content but a lower soluble solids concentration. So far, of the three practices
studied, weed mat was best suited to organic production of blackberries. The initial cost
of the weed mat was far less than the cost of hand-weeding during the first 3 years after
planting, and after only one season of fruit production, the yield benefit of weed mat
provided enough profit to warrant its use over no weeding or hand-weeding.
Genre Article
Topic Drip irrigation
Identifier Harkins, R. H., Strik, B. C., & Bryla, D. R. (2013). Weed Management Practices for Organic Production of Trailing Blackberry: I. Plant Growth and Early Fruit Production. HortScience, 48(9), 1139-1144.

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