Reasons You Will Want to Control Volunteer Wheat and Weeds in Wheat Stubble After Harvest

Virus infected wheat
Figure 1. The wheat-mite-virus complex has extreme potential to impact yield the following year if high risk volunteer wheat situations are not managed well. (Photo by Gary Hein)

Reasons You Will Want to Control Volunteer Wheat and Weeds in Wheat Stubble After Harvest

REVISED: June 19, 2024 (originally published July 12, 2019)

Soil Water Loss (SWL) — On average, there are three inches of soil water loss for weeds, including volunteer wheat not controlled in the wheat stubble. This could translate into about a 35-bushel decrease in corn or grain sorghum yields in the following year. See the article “Economics Improve with Dryland Corn and Grain Sorghum Following Weed Control in Winter Wheat Stubble” in the July 5, 2024 issue of CropWatch.

Wheat Streak Mosaic (WSM) disease complex — Did you know you can lose two wheat crops from one hailstorm? It could be yours or your neighbor’s. The first loss is from the current wheat crop being hailed. The second loss is from the WSM complex.

For example: The volunteer wheat from one neighbor's hailed winter wheat crop served as a host for the wheat curl mite — carrying the viruses — that infected the farmer’s wheat crop across the road, which averaged just five to six bushels per acre on 320 acres. In comparison, his other fields not affected by WSM averaged 60 bu/ac.

Volunteer wheat can provide the summer "green bridge" for the wheat streak mosaic disease complex, comprised of three viruses transmitted by wheat curl mites, wheat streak mosaic virus, Triticum mosaic virus and High Plains wheat mosaic virus. By far, the greatest risk of loss from mite-transmitted viruses occurs when there is a summer "green bridge" of volunteer wheat emerging before harvest. This almost always occurs as a result of wheat seed shattered from heads during hailstorms.

Depending on when the wheat crop is infected with the virus, damage can be as great as a total loss of the field affected by WSM disease complex (Figure 2). One tenant had a greater loss, as the landlord thought there had to be enough wheat in the field to pay for harvest, but the field only averaged six bushels per acre, which was not enough to cover the cost of custom harvest.

Winter wheat head with sprouting volunteer against a backdrop photo of a wheat field with severe virus symptoms
Figure 2. Volunteer wheat, like that illustrated in the inset image, due to a widespread hail event that occurred prior to harvest in 2016 resulted in widespread yield loss to mite-transmitted viruses in Deuel and Garden counties in 2017. (Photos by Gary Hein)

The mites (Figure 3) and viruses survive and build up through the summer on this "green bridge," then in the fall, the mites are carried by wind from volunteer wheat to newly emerged winter wheat plants and transmit the viruses.

Mites depend on wind for dispersal. Through the fall, as mite populations increase, they leave the protected areas of volunteer wheat plants (rolled leaves and whorls) and crawl to leaf tips or other exposed areas where they become airborne. After landing on a new host, the mites crawl to the youngest leaf and begin to feed and reproduce.

wheat curl mite
Figure 3. Wheat curl mite on a wheat leaf.

In heavily infested volunteer wheat, most mites will carry the virus. Transmission to the young winter wheat plants requires only a few viruliferous individuals. Immature mites acquire the virus in as little as 15 minutes as they feed on infected leaves. Mites remain active for most of their lives (two to four weeks or longer with cool temperatures), but the transmission efficiency of adult mites decreases with age.

Research has found that mites can only survive off green plants for a day or so under warm summer temperatures, but two to four days under more mild conditions (e.g., lower temperatures and higher humidities). Thus, a significant number of mites may be transported by the wind from greater distances than we originally thought; however, the greatest risk is to the fields closest to the volunteer wheat. Video 1 demonstrates mite and virus development throughout the year.

Video 1. Mite and virus development throughout the year.

Volunteer wheat is not the only summer host for the wheat curl mite (Figure 3). Over-summering hosts can also include corn or foxtail millet. An important consideration for these crops is to try to minimize the overlap of the green and growing summer crop and the emerged new crop of wheat in the fall. The greater the overlap, the greater the risk from these hosts.

Some summer annual grassy weeds can also act as mite and virus hosts — the  higher the density of these grasses, the greater the risk. Recent research has evaluated the suitability of weedy grasses as hosts for both the curl mite and the wheat streak mosaic virus complex. Barnyardgrass topped the list in terms of suitability for both virus and mites, but fortunately it is not a common grass in wheat except in low areas — including terraces — that accumulate water.

In contrast, green foxtail is a rather poor host for the mites but could be an important disease reservoir simply because of its abundance. In one example, the source of mites in a winter wheat field infected with wheat streak mosaic virus was a grain sorghum field with grassy weeds adjacent to the winter wheat field. Take note of significant stands of these grasses and control them as you would volunteer wheat.

Timely Weed Control Helps Manage Yield Loss Risk

Risks from not controlling volunteer wheat and weeds include:

  • Pre-harvest volunteer wheat can cost you or your neighbor the value of next year's winter wheat crop due to loss from WSM. In addition, loss of the winter wheat residue can lead to much lower yields in the following corn or grain sorghum crop. While control of both pre- and post-harvest “green bridge” hosts is important, timely control of pre-harvest volunteer wheat will have a greater impact on ultimately reducing virus transmission and yield loss (Figure 4).
  • Any volunteer wheat that has emerged around wheat harvest, even in a summer crop like sunflower or corn, can also be a significant risk. Figure 5 shows considerable volunteer wheat in a sunflower field in the fall that was heavily infested with mites. This field resulted in total loss to adjoining wheat fields.
  • Uncontrolled volunteer wheat and weeds can cost you 30 bu/acre or more of corn or sorghum the next year due to soil moisture taken up by volunteer wheat and weeds.
  • Weed control may be more difficult and expensive in next year's crop.
  • Planting the next crop may be more difficult in last year's weed-infested stubble.
Figure 4. Comparison of the increased disease risk of pre-harvest volunteer wheat (first image, usually from hailstorms) versus post-harvest volunteer wheat where the green bridge has been broken (second image) in the development of wheat streak mosaic. (Source: Justin McMechan)

Impact of Wheat Seeding Time

The earlier winter wheat is seeded and the longer mild weather extends through the fall, the greater the risk of wheat streak mosaic virus complex infections. For instance, near Ogallala, the winter wheat yield doubled with a one-week delay in seeding date. Under warm fall conditions, the probability of secondary spread of mites and viruses increases, resulting in greater incidence of infection.

In another field near Ogallala, wheat seeded on Sept. 8 was lost to the wheat streak mosaic complex, while a field across the road seeded Sept. 19 to the same winter wheat variety was not affected by the disease complex.

Reproduction and spread of mites stop with cool temperatures in the fall; however, mites can survive cold winter temperatures. The virus survives the winter within the plant, and the mites survive as eggs, nymphs or adults, protected in the crown of the wheat plant. As winter wheat greens up in the spring, mites become active and the virus may spread to healthy winter wheat plants or emerging spring wheat, although this is much less of a threat than fall transmission.

Field infected with wheat virus
Figure 5. Uncontrolled volunteer wheat in a sunflower field played host to a heavy mite infestation in the fall, which led to total loss of the adjoining neighbors' wheat fields the next year. (Photo by Gary Hein)

Additional Losses Associated with Volunteer Wheat

Diseases. Volunteer wheat can provide habitat for many other pathogens that may later be a problem if continuous wheat is seeded in the fall. Root rots, as well as seedling blights, caused by Fusarium species are specific examples. Occasionally, fall season leaf rust or stripe rust can occur. Severity of these rust diseases on the newly emerged winter wheat crop will be much higher if volunteer wheat is not controlled, and it is able to serve as a local source of inoculum.

Hessian Flies. Volunteer wheat allowed to survive through late summer and fall also dramatically increases the risk from Hessian fly. Volunteer wheat present in the early fall can serve as a host for the flies’ fall generation, resulting in greater risk from the flies’ subsequent generation the following spring.

Moisture Loss. Volunteer winter wheat and weeds also use soil water, which would otherwise be used by the following crop. The average soil water loss due to volunteer wheat is three inches, which can result in yield losses of 30 bushels or more in corn or sorghum. Occasionally the loss can be as much as 100 bushels. How does this happen when we only save three inches of soil water? With the additional three inches of soil water, the corn or sorghum crop will survive up to three weeks longer without rain before being lost to drought. Hence, if enough rain is received in time, we have observed yields of 100 bushels or more of corn or sorghum where volunteer wheat and other weeds were controlled after wheat harvest.

Increased Weed Seed. Letting weeds produce seed increases the weed seed bank and makes weed control more difficult in the succeeding crops. The additional weed residue also makes planting the following crop more difficult.

Summary

Volunteer wheat surviving through the summer and fall creates numerous risks for the subsequent wheat crop, as well as other rotated crops. Controlling volunteer wheat will reduce the risks from these threats and ultimately improve the bottom line.

For herbicide options to control volunteer wheat and annual grasses, check the 2024 Guide for Weed, Disease, and Insect Management in Nebraska.

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