ANNUAL
RYEGRASS AND ANNUAL BLUEGRASS
Annual ryegrass (Italian
ryegrass) and annual bluegrass (poa annua) are grasses that can
pose special weed problems in
some lawns. These grasses display
one common characteristic, which is an
inability to tolerate hot
weather well.
Annual ryegrass is
a yellow-green, coarse-bladed grass that is a common
contaminant of even the highest quality turf-type
Tall Fescue seed lots. It
matures fast into a large, steamy plant. When mown at normal lawn cutting
heights, almost all of the leaf tissue is
removed, leaving coarse , brown stems
showing. While it is an annual , the Italian
ryegrass plant is actually capable
of surviving for as long 2-3 years under
some circumstances. There is no
selective
control for it. Annual ryegrass will "mow out" over
time, and can
be both masked and crowded
out by seeding with desirable turf species. It
can be killed by wick application of a non-selective
herbicide such as
"Roundup", but the process is
time consuming and risky to the desirable
grasses intermingled with the annual
ryegrass.
Poa annua is a very
low-growing, fine-textured, apple green annual grass.
The surface of the leave blades is wavy. It
prefers well irrigated, highly
fertilized soils. It is easy
to distinguish in the lawn by its prolific production
of white, fluffy seed heads that grow so low
to the ground that they escape
the mower. This is usually
most evident in late-April through May. Once
established, annual bluegrass can become the
dominant species during the
spring in large areas of a
lawn. It dies out quickly at the onset of hot
weather, and those same areas will become
bare. When cool weather returns,
new plants
germinate from seed. By the following spring, the areas are again
so dense and competitive that seeds of
desirable species are unable to establish.
Annual
bluegrass can ultimately be controlled by several years of
consecutive pre-emergent herbicide
applications made during the late-summer/early-fall.
Then the treated areas can
be re-established by a late
spring over seeding with desirable turf grass species.
Any surviving annual bluegrass plants should
be raked out prior to the seeding.
In addition to the described pre-emergent
herbicide applications, rough bluegrass
must also be sprayed in the spring with a
non-selective herbicide such as Roundup
to kill the already established plants prior
to the spring seeding.
Our office hours are 9:00- 5:00, Monday-Friday (EST).
Tel: 703-938-8844
Fax: 703-938-4187
Postal Address: P.O. Box 603, Vienna, VA. 22183.
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