Study finds cereal rye contains high rates of weed seeds

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By Don Robison

Cover crops have increased in interest and acres planted substantially in the past decade. Indiana has now had three consecutive years of more than 1 million acres of cover crops planted.

While cover crops are beneficial, there is an underlying issue among some of the species being used by Indiana farmers — weed seeds in the cover crop seed.

The Indiana State Seed Lab conducts hundreds of seed tests on cover crop seed each year. These tests include investigations for the presence of noxious weed seed, seed purity, germination, seed count and other quality measures.

Rye

The vast majority of cover crop seed sources are passing these tests at a high rate. There is one glaring exception — cereal rye.

Starting with 2016 and continuing through ’17 and ’18 the lab has had higher failure rates on both regulatory and service samples of rye. These results are from more than 400 samples tested.

Much of the failure comes from locally grown cereal rye seed. One particular sample of organic rye in 2016 had 23 species of weed seeds and had been “cleaned” prior to the tests.

While that is not the norm, it isn’t an outlier.

In 2018, several samples were found with more than 10 species of weed seeds. Noxious weed seeds, along with amaranth (many different species including pigweed and waterhemp) and poison hemlock show up in these tests as well (see table).

Cover crops and weed table

In 2018, the average germination rate on cereal rye was just 74.28 percent, down from 85.04 percent in 2016. The average number of weed species found this year is just over three weed species per sample.

When applying a two-stage filter of seed samples that had germination rates of over 85 percent and contained no weed seeds, locally grown samples hit that high-quality mark in just 11 percent of the samples, compared to nearly 60 percent of the professionally grown seed samples.

A 2017 study of 112 samples shows that where the rye is grown influences the quality indicators measured in the lab.

Southern Indiana rye had a 75 percent germination rate, northern Indiana rye averaged 82 percent and rye from traditional growing regions such as North Dakota or Canada averaged 90 percent germination.

There are some very good locally grown samples. But more than 23 percent of all locally grown rye samples had a germination rate below 50 percent.

Bottom line

It is important to know your seed source and have a copy of the seed lab report in hand before planting rye to avoid unintended consequences of planting additional weeds in your field.

(Don Robison is a seed administrator, Indiana State Seed Lab, office of Indiana state chemist.)

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