Echinochloa crus-galli (L.) Beauv.

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Graminae

Synonyms

Panicum crus-galli (L.).

Common names

Barnyard millet (Australia), water grass (United States), cockspur grass (South Australia), song chang (Viet Nam).

Description

An annual with more or less robust culms ascending to 105 cm from a geniculate base; spikelets 3-4 mm, crowded in the racemes, which are often branched; panicle dense and stiffly erect (Henty, 1969). The basal sheaths are commonly purplish, owing to the folding together of the sides of the sheaths (Burbidge, 1968).

Distribution

A worldwide weed of cultivation in the tropics.

Season of growth

Summer.

Altitude range

Sea-level to 2 500 m.

Soil requirements

It will grow in a variety of soils in wet situations, but is usually found on silts and clays in ponds and depressions.

Tolerance to herbicides

To control chemically, use a pre-emergence spray of 2,4-D sodium salt at 4.5 kg/ha of an 840 g AI/kg product (e.g. Hormicide). No wetting agent is required when used as a pre-emergent spray. Use a minimum of 340 litres of water per hectare. To kill young plants, spray with paraquat at 570 ml of a 200 g AI/I product (e.g. Gramoxone) per 200 litres water plus surfactant at 250 ml/200 l water. Spray to a point of run-off. For advanced plants give one spraying with 2.2- DPA at 2.3 kg of 740 g AI/kg product (e.g. Shirpon, Dowpon) plus 250 ml wetting agent per 200 litres water. Thoroughly wet the plants (Tilley, 1977). In the Ord River valley, northern Australia, E. colona and E. crus-galli were controlled with Stam F-34 (3,4 - dichloropropionanilide) at 3.25-7.5 kg active ingredient per hectare, two to three weeks after emergence.

Dry-matter and green-matter yields

At Laguna, the Philippines, Furoc and Javier (1976) gathered 3.88-11.07 t/ha green weeds (chiefly E. crus-galli) from a rice field from the first to the last weeding.

Main attributes

Its rapid germination and growth provide nutritious and succulent forage.

Main deficiencies

Its problem as a weed in rice.

Response to photoperiod

Flowering is accelerated by short days (Evans, Wardlaw & Williams, 1964).

Natural habitat

Freshwater swamps.

Tolerance to flooding

Excellent. It often grows in standing water and is the main weed in rice paddies throughout the world.

Genetics and reproduction

2n=36, 42, 48, 54, 72 (Fedorov, 1974).

Economics

It is the world's worst weed in paddy rice. It is a useful forage plant for all herbivorous animals and the grain is eaten by humans in times of want.

Animal production

It is relished by stock everywhere, and where it does not interfere with cropping it is valued for grazing, especially for dry-season forage when other grasses on dry land have matured. It is an important grazing plant for buffaloes in Viet Nam. In the Philippines, Furoc and Javier (1976) considered that one farmer could collect sufficient weeds to feed four steers daily from 0.43 hectares of weed-infested rice.

Dormancy

The seed germinates with the sown rice, but cannot germinate in water deeper than 15 cm, so flooding the rice field with water to this depth will give the rice seedlings an advantage.

Links:

Links for the genus:

Grass genera of the world: Information about botany, ecology etc. of the Eriochloa genus; links to photographs and drawings

Further reading

Seaman et al., 1968.