Control
Prevention and early eradication
- Be careful not to import hay from farms where the weed is prevalent, and ensure contractors don’t bring it onto your farm from contaminated properties
- Uncertified seed in summer crops such as maize, sorghum and sunflowers can also contain burs.
- Removing the first few plants that appear on the farm can pay big dividends by saving on future costs. Pulling plants out (carefully – watch those spines!) and putting them in plastic bags before burning or burying them very deeply is probably the best treatment for those first few. Take care not to spread the seed around
- After using herbicides, competitive pastures must be maintained to reduce re-infestation.
Grazing
- Grazing is not an effective method of control.
Mowing
- Mowing is not usually an effective control method. Rotary slashing can be used but must be done before any burs are formed, and plants may still regrow afterwards.
Pasture species/cultivars
- The best long term control option is probably pasture renewal, with a summer of fodder cropping. A large proportion of the dormant seed will then germinate and allow easier control
- Establishment of more competitive and locally-appropriate pasture species may reduce the incidence of Bathurst bur by shading it out
- A dense sward of sown pasture species, especially in late spring but preferably all year round, prevents plants from establishing.
Chemical control
- Control programmes should aim to prevent seeding for 3 or 4 years
- In pasture young plants can be controlled with broadcast applications of 2,4-D or MCPA, preferably before any burs are produced
- Metribuzin, picloram, dicamba, 2,4-DB, MCPB, atrazine and pendimethalin have all been used selectively in the appropriate crops, refer to specific product labels and cropping guides for their use
- Mature plants in pasture will require spot treatment with herbicides which will damage either the grass or the clover (or in some cases both) component of the pasture sward, refer to table below for options
- One recommendation is to spray before plants set seed with metsulfuron + penetrant, clopyralid or glyphosate
- All of these will damage clovers: clopyralid does NOT damage grasses and will not result in bare ground but both have residual activity. Metsulfuron kills some species of grasses, but not all, and it again has residual activity
- Glyphosate kills any green plants and results in bare ground in which new seedlings of Bathurst bur can emerge, but it has no residual activity
- Clopyralid can contaminate lawn clippings and and these must NOT be composted.
It is recommended that with the exception of 2,4-D all the chemicals below only be used as spot treatments in pasture. They may be used over larger waste areas.
Active ingredient |
When to apply |
Residual effect |
Grass Damage |
Clover Damage |
glyphosate |
spring/summer |
none |
severe |
severe |
metsulfuron |
spring/summer |
short |
moderate |
severe |
picloram (prills) |
spring/summer |
moderate |
slight |
moderate |
picloram (gel) |
apply to freshly cut stump anytime |
short |
none |
severe |
triclopyr |
spring/summer |
short |
none (except kikuyu) |
severe |
triclopyr/aminopyralid |
spring/summer |
long |
none (except kikuyu) |
extremely severe |
picloram/triclopyr |
spring/summer |
moderate |
slight |
severe |
picloram/metsulfuron |
spring/summer |
moderate |
moderate |
severe |
2,4-D |
spring/summer |
short |
none |
slight |
clopyralid |
spring/summer |
short |
none |
severe |
Biocontrol
- No biological control agents are available for Bathurst bur
- A fungus (Colletotrichum orbiculare) that causes anthracnose and seedling blight in Bathurst bur was observed in New South Wales in 1948 and was tested as a control agent, but did not prove reliable enough to be of practical use
- Other insects and fungi attack Bathurst bur but outbreaks are spasmodic and none have given long-term control.