An Overview of Weed Management in the Wild Lowbush Blueberry—Past and Present

2004 
SUMMARY The wild lowbush blueberry (Vaccinium angustifolium Ait.) is an important successional species of cleared woodland and abandoned farmland of northeastern North America where commercial, managed blueberry fields have been developed. Unlike other fruit crops, the weed flora is unique and consists mainly of a broad range of native herbaceous and woody perennial species that thrive under the two-year cropping system. Traditionally, weedy vegetation was controlled or suppressed by burning, cutting, and roguing, and regenerating woody and herbaceous species were the major weed problems. The introduction of phenoxyalkanoic herbicides in the late 1940s lead to the early development by innovative growers of selective roller/wiper applicators that could control the taller, weedy overstory. Several selective preemergence herbicides (terbacil and diuron) were introduced in the 1970s to control grasses and some broadleaved weeds, and hexazinone was approved in Canada in 1982 and in Maine in 1983. This soil-app...
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