Micro Electric Shocks Control Broadleaved and Grass Weeds
A search for energy efficient, non-herbicide weed control methods led to development of a novel electrical weeding technology. This study focuses on weed control efficiency and energy as elements of a system that would include machine vision and robotics to control escape weeds in field crops. Two p...
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Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
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MDPI AG
2022-08-01
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Series: | Agronomy |
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Online Access: | https://www.mdpi.com/2073-4395/12/9/2039 |
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author | Daniel J. Bloomer Kerry C. Harrington Hossein Ghanizadeh Trevor K. James |
author_facet | Daniel J. Bloomer Kerry C. Harrington Hossein Ghanizadeh Trevor K. James |
author_sort | Daniel J. Bloomer |
collection | DOAJ |
description | A search for energy efficient, non-herbicide weed control methods led to development of a novel electrical weeding technology. This study focuses on weed control efficiency and energy as elements of a system that would include machine vision and robotics to control escape weeds in field crops. Two pulse generation systems, one single and one multiple, were developed and evaluated at different delivered voltages and energies. Greenhouse trials using specially designed and built application and recording technology showed the application of precisely applied micro-shocks with precisely controlled direct current (DC) voltage, pulse number, pulse length and period (hereafter PMS) can kill small <i>Lolium multiflorum</i> Lam., <i>Chenopodium album</i> L., <i>Amaranthus powellii</i> S. Wats. and <i>Solanum nigrum</i> L. plants with minimal energy. Plants took as much as two weeks to die. Increasing applied energy increased effectiveness as determined by plant biomass reduction and death rate. Grasses appear difficult to control once tillering has commenced, and high voltages may destroy leaf blades but not growing points. Broadleaved plants took several days to show evidence of chlorosis which preceded senescence and death. Our results showed that 5 J is sufficient energy to bring about death or severe growth limitation in many seedlings up to 15 cm height. This is as little as 1% of the energy of, and more effective than, ultra-low energy treatments reported in other recent research. To control five herbicide resistant weeds m<sup>−2</sup>, the required energy would be about 0.25 MJ ha<sup>−1</sup> plus transport and actuation energy for weed destruction, as compared to an optimum target of about 20–40 MJ ha<sup>−1</sup> including transport suggested in the literature. PMS can effectively control broadleaved weed seedlings and small non-tillering grasses at a fraction of the energy required by commercially available systems. This indicates PMS has potential as a viable technology for hand-held electric weeders or as part of a site-specific robotic weeding system. |
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id | doaj.art-6bcf9c5974ce44a4bbc2cfc73ad0671f |
institution | Directory Open Access Journal |
issn | 2073-4395 |
language | English |
last_indexed | 2024-03-10T01:00:39Z |
publishDate | 2022-08-01 |
publisher | MDPI AG |
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series | Agronomy |
spelling | doaj.art-6bcf9c5974ce44a4bbc2cfc73ad0671f2023-11-23T14:36:20ZengMDPI AGAgronomy2073-43952022-08-01129203910.3390/agronomy12092039Micro Electric Shocks Control Broadleaved and Grass WeedsDaniel J. Bloomer0Kerry C. Harrington1Hossein Ghanizadeh2Trevor K. James3School of Agriculture and Environment, Massey University, Palmerston North 4442, New ZealandSchool of Agriculture and Environment, Massey University, Palmerston North 4442, New ZealandSchool of Agriculture and Environment, Massey University, Palmerston North 4442, New ZealandForage Science, AgResearch Limited, Hamilton 3240, New ZealandA search for energy efficient, non-herbicide weed control methods led to development of a novel electrical weeding technology. This study focuses on weed control efficiency and energy as elements of a system that would include machine vision and robotics to control escape weeds in field crops. Two pulse generation systems, one single and one multiple, were developed and evaluated at different delivered voltages and energies. Greenhouse trials using specially designed and built application and recording technology showed the application of precisely applied micro-shocks with precisely controlled direct current (DC) voltage, pulse number, pulse length and period (hereafter PMS) can kill small <i>Lolium multiflorum</i> Lam., <i>Chenopodium album</i> L., <i>Amaranthus powellii</i> S. Wats. and <i>Solanum nigrum</i> L. plants with minimal energy. Plants took as much as two weeks to die. Increasing applied energy increased effectiveness as determined by plant biomass reduction and death rate. Grasses appear difficult to control once tillering has commenced, and high voltages may destroy leaf blades but not growing points. Broadleaved plants took several days to show evidence of chlorosis which preceded senescence and death. Our results showed that 5 J is sufficient energy to bring about death or severe growth limitation in many seedlings up to 15 cm height. This is as little as 1% of the energy of, and more effective than, ultra-low energy treatments reported in other recent research. To control five herbicide resistant weeds m<sup>−2</sup>, the required energy would be about 0.25 MJ ha<sup>−1</sup> plus transport and actuation energy for weed destruction, as compared to an optimum target of about 20–40 MJ ha<sup>−1</sup> including transport suggested in the literature. PMS can effectively control broadleaved weed seedlings and small non-tillering grasses at a fraction of the energy required by commercially available systems. This indicates PMS has potential as a viable technology for hand-held electric weeders or as part of a site-specific robotic weeding system.https://www.mdpi.com/2073-4395/12/9/2039nonchemical weed-controlsite-specific weed managementelectric weedingrobotic weedingelectric shocksapplied energy |
spellingShingle | Daniel J. Bloomer Kerry C. Harrington Hossein Ghanizadeh Trevor K. James Micro Electric Shocks Control Broadleaved and Grass Weeds Agronomy nonchemical weed-control site-specific weed management electric weeding robotic weeding electric shocks applied energy |
title | Micro Electric Shocks Control Broadleaved and Grass Weeds |
title_full | Micro Electric Shocks Control Broadleaved and Grass Weeds |
title_fullStr | Micro Electric Shocks Control Broadleaved and Grass Weeds |
title_full_unstemmed | Micro Electric Shocks Control Broadleaved and Grass Weeds |
title_short | Micro Electric Shocks Control Broadleaved and Grass Weeds |
title_sort | micro electric shocks control broadleaved and grass weeds |
topic | nonchemical weed-control site-specific weed management electric weeding robotic weeding electric shocks applied energy |
url | https://www.mdpi.com/2073-4395/12/9/2039 |
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