Crops & Weeds. District & State 4-H O-Rama Junior & Senior 4-H ers Crop, Soil and Environmental Sciences

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9/2017 Crops & Weeds District & State 4-H O-Rama Junior & Senior 4-H ers Crop, Soil and Environmental Sciences OBJECTIVES Targeted Life Skills: Self-esteem, Problem Solving, Wise Use of Resources, Self-motivation, Critical Thinking and Leadership Opportunities will be provided for faculty to share information about related college degree programs in Crop Management and Environmental, Soil and Water Science and the following career options: Plant Breeding, Research, Teaching, Public Education at Universities, Farm Management, County Extension Service, Plant Protection Sales Representative, Crop Consultant, Soil Conservationist, Farming. ELIGIBILITY District 4-H 0-Rama: Each county may enter one junior and one senior 4-H member at the District 4-H 0-Rama. Arkansas 4-H 0-Rama: First through seventh place senior winners from each District 0-Rama are eligible to compete at the State 4-H 0-Rama. ACTIVITY The activity will include the following: 1. Exam (For Seniors Only) A twenty-five question exam will be given. The questions will be taken from the Arkansas Row Crops Quick Facts (Corn, Grain Sorghum, Cotton, Rice, Soybean and Wheat) for the current year. This part of the activity has a value of 100 points. 2018 exam questions will come from the Grain Sorghum & Wheat Quick Facts Sheets. Arkansas Row Crops Quick Facts for all major Arkansas crops can be downloaded from Extension s Row Crops and Commercial Horticulture page https://www.uaex.edu/farm-ranch/crops-commercial-horticulture/. Select the appropriate crop on this page then select the Quick Facts link for that crop. You may also request a Quick Facts sheet at your local County Extension Office. 2. Field Crop Fertilizer Recommendation (For Seniors Only) - Each participant should be prepared to write a fertilizer recommendation for the nutrients nitrogen (N), phosphorus (P) and potassium (K) expressed in pounds per acre when given a soil test report from a given row crop field. Charts will be provided with the recommended rate based on soil test value just as they are in the Arkansas Row Crop Quick Facts. The 2018 fertilizer recommendation will be for Wheat. This part of the activity has a value of 45 points. Resources for this activity include: FSA2153, The Soil Test Report: https://www.uaex.edu/publications/pdf/fsa-2153.pdf

9/2017 FSA-2118, Understanding the Numbers on Your Soil Test Report: https://www.uaex.edu/publications/pdf/fsa-2118.pdf 3. Field Crops and Noxious Weeds Identification (For Juniors and Seniors) - Each participant should be prepared to identify five common Arkansas field crops and fifteen weeds selected from the lists below. Plants can easily be identified by learning the size, shape, texture, and arrangement of leaves as well as flower and stem characteristics. To identify seeds, look for differences in size, shape, texture and color. The field crops will be identified from pictures or planting seeds. The weeds from pictures of the vegetative, above ground portion of the plant. This part of the activity has a value of 100 points. Resources for this activity include: FSA-2153, The Soil Test Report: https://www.uaex.edu/publications/pdf/fsa-2153.pdf FSA-2118, Understanding the Numbers on Your Soil Test Report: https://www.uaex.edu/publications/pdf/fsa-2118.pdf 4. Tie Breaker (For Juniors and Seniors) - In the event of a tie score, up to five open ended questions taken from the Quick Facts Sheet will be asked. Weeds 1. Balloonvine 2. Barnyardgrass 3. Broadleaf Signalgrass 4. Buttercup 5. Cheat 6. Cocklebur 7. Common Ragweed 8. Crabgrass 9. Curly Dock 10. Ducksalad 11. Foxtail 12. Giant Ragweed 13. Gooseweed 14. Groundcherry 15. Hemp Sesbania (coffeebean) 16. Henbit 17. Horsenettle 18. Johnsongrass 19. Morningglory 20. Northern Jointvetch (curly Indigo) 21. Pigweed 22. Pruple Moonflower 23. Red Rice 24. Ryegrass 25. Smartweed 26. Vetch 27. Wild Garlic 28. Woolly Croton 29. Yellow Nutsedge Crops 1. Corn 2. Cotton 3. Grain Sorghum 4. Rice 5. Soybean 6. Wheat A power point "Arkansas Field Crops and Weeds" will be prepared and made available for download on line.

9/2017 AWARDS District 4-H 0-Rama: One trophy to the senior winner and one trophy to the junior winner. Ribbons will be awarded to 2nd, 3rd, 4th, and 5th place winners in the junior and senior activity. Arkansas 4-H 0-Rama: One trophy for the senior winner. Ribbons will be awarded to the 2nd, 3rd, 4th, and 5th place winners. JUDGING This activity will be judged in accordance with the procedures outlined in the attached guidelines. PREPARED BY Chris Elkins, Area Agronomist - Soybean & Wheat Amanda Free, Area Agronomist - Cotton Chuck Capps, Area Agronomist - Corn & Grain Sorghum Chad Norton, Area Agronomist - Soybean & Wheat Ralph Mazantti, Area Agronomist - Rice Ron Baker, Area Agronomist - Rice Jeremy Ross, Extension Agronomist - Soybean Jason Kelley, Extension Agronomist - Wheat & Feed Grains Jarrod Hardke, Extension Agronomist - Rice Bill Robertson, Extension Agronomist - Cotton Leo Espinoza, Extension Soil Scientist Bob Scott, Extension Weed Scientist CONTACT PERSON Ron Baker, Area Agronomist - Rice Note: Work done in connection with the district and state 4-H crops activities should be reported in 4-H record books under agriculture, field crops, achievement, conservation of natural resources, or under other related areas.

9/2017 Corn 4-H SEED IDENTIFICATION Description of Seed CROP PICTURE DESCRIPTION Large seed roughly as large as or larger than your little fingernail and 3/16 inches thick. Yellow or white grain, white to creamy starch inside, dent in crown when dry. Cotton 3/8 inches long, 3/16 inches thick, wedgeshaped, seed coat hard and black in color, entirely covered with lint unless acid delinted Grain Sorghum Seed roundish, glumes covering the caryopsis vary in color from straw-red to black, depending on the variety. Hulled seed are reddish, yellow or white, depending on variety. Germ (small "dimple" that is lighter in color than the rest of the seed) on one end, similar to wheat. Rice Long, slender, smooth, straw-colored hull. May have short awn on tip of some grain. White color when hull is removed. Soybeans Round seed, yellow, black Hilum. Wheat Free of lemma and palea, most varieties are rather full and plump; light reddish-brown in color.

9/2017 4-H SEED IDENTIFICATION Description of Weed WEED PICTURE DESCRIPTION Balloonvine Balloon vine is named for its fruits, which occur as inflated capsules with pointed tips. This vine can grow up to 8 m high in the canopy. The leaves are made up of nine leaflets, which have toothed margins and are dark green in color. Barnyardgrass Broadleaf Signalgrass Buttercup A summer annual with thick stems that may reach 5 feet in height. One of the few grass weeds in which ligules are absent. Found throughout the United States, Canada, and Mexico as a weed of many agronomic crops, nurseries, landscape, and turf. A spreading summer annual that commonly is found growing along the ground but with tips ascending (decumbent growth habit). Broadleaf signalgrass may reach as much as 3 feet in height and is found most commonly as a weed of agronomic crops of the southeastern United States. A low-growing perennial with divided leaves and distinctive yellow flowers. The buttercups are common weeds of turfgrass, lawns, pastures, hay fields, and occasionally landscapes. Cheat Cocklebur A winter annual grass that can reach as much as 3.5 feet in height. Cheat is found in cultivated areas, agronomic crop fields (most notably wheat), pastures, roadsides, and waste areas. The stem below the cotyledons (hypocotyl) is purple at the base and often green in the upper portion. Cotyledons are linear to oblong in out- line, waxy, smooth, fleshy, thick, approximately 3/4 to1 3/4 inches long and usually no more than 1/2 inch wide. The first true leaves are opposite, while all subsequent leaves are alternate

9/2017 Common Ragweed Crabgrass Curly Dock Ducksalad Foxtail Giant Ragweed Goosegrass Stems below cotyledons (hypocotyls) are green, usually spotted with purple. Cotyledons are roundish to oblong, purple underneath. Young leaves opposite, becoming alternate with age, dense pubescence over entire leaf surface. Summer annual, having a prostrate or ascending growth habit, with leaves and sheaths that do not have hairs and stems that do not root at the nodes. Found throughout the United States. Taprooted perennial, developing a basal rosette of wavy-margined leaves and an un- branched stem that may reach 5 feet in height. Found throughout the United States primarily as a weed of pastures, hay fields, forages, landscapes, and some agronomic crops. The mature plant is erect and grows to over 1-1/2 feet (about 0.5 m) with bright, waxy green, oval-shaped leaf blades that may be sub- merged, floating, or held above the water's surface. Sometimes plants develop a creeping horizontal stem. A clump-forming summer annual with a seed- head that resembles a fox s tail. A weed of many agronomic crops, turf, landscapes, and nurseries. Found throughout the United States, especially on fertile soil. Erect summer annual that may reach 16 feet in height. Leaves are large and distinctively 3- lobed, or less often 5- obed. Primarily a weed of agronomic crops that thrives in fertile soils. Found throughout the U.S. except the Pacific Coast, areas of the Southwest, and portions of Florida and Maine. Flattened stems with a distinctive white or silver center. Plants often appear compressed to the soil, as if they have been repeatedly stepped on. A distinctive white center of goosegrass distinguishes it from most other grass weeds.

9/2017 Groundcherry They are herbaceous plants growing to 0.4-3 m tall, similar to the common tomato - a relative- but usually with a stiffer, more upright stem; they can be either annual or perennial. Hemp Sesbania (Coffeebean) Henbit Horsenette Erect annual, reaching 3-6 feet in height, with distinctive seed pods and showy yellow flowers. Primarily a weed of agronomic crops found in the coastal plain but occasionally in the piedmonts of North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, Florida, Alabama, Mississippi, and Virinia. Winter annual with square stems and pinkpurple flowers, reaching 16 inches in height. Primarily a weed of turfgrass, landscapes and small grains. Found throughout the United States but most common in the eastern states. A perennial from rhizomes with conspicuous spines on the leaves and stems that may reach 3 ft in height. Horsenettle is found throughout the southeastern, eastern, and north-central United States. All parts of the plant, except the mature fruit, are poisonous to livestock even when this weed is consumed in dry hay. However, consumption of this weed rarely occurs due to the rickl stems and leaves.

9/2017 Johnsongrass Morningglory Northern Jointvetch (Curly Indigo) Pigweed Originally introduced as a forage crop, this weed is now one of the most common and troublesome weeds of most agronomic and horticultural crops, as well as roadsides, pastures, and hay fields A trailing or climbing annual vine with heart shaped leaves that taper to a point with attractive funnel-shaped white flowers. Primarily a weed of agronomic crops, landscapes, nurseries and sometimes in noncrop areas Northern jointvetch plants have large stipules or bracts at the base of the leaf stalk or petiole. Both have pea-like flowers and can be distinguished from hemp sesbania because of a smaller size and more delicate appearance. The alternating leaves have as many as 56 oblong leaflets with smooth edges Dense, compact terminal panicles and relatively tall plants with alternately arranged leaves with petioles that are longer than the leaves. Purple Moonflower Several characteristics make purple moonflower relatively easy to identify. Large, shiny, butterflyshaped cotyledon leaves and fleshy stem prickles are characteristics unique to purple moonflower. Purple moonflower plants also produce large, lavender colored flowers.

9/2017 Red Rice Ryegrass Red rice plants vary considerably. The tallgrowing, black-hulled, awned plant is easiest to recognize and is considered by many to be a typical red rice plant. However, other strains have developed that have straw-colored hulls, are awnless and are about the same height as desirable rice varieties. A winter annual that may reach 3 ft in height with conspicuous auricles and a distinctive seedhead. Found throughout the United States, primarily as a weed of small grains. Smartweed The elliptic to lanceolate leaves with a purple spotted ladys thumb print in the middle and distinctive ocrea are all characteristics that help to distinguish Pennsylvania smartweed from other similar weeds Vetch A trailing or climbing summer annual vine with leaves that are divided into many leaflets. The vetches are common weeds of roadsides, pastures, landscapes, ornamentals, and some of the winter annuals are weeds of winter small grains.

9/2017 Wild Garlic A perennial from bulblets that emits a strong garlic or onion smell when crushed. Primarily a weed of small grains, turfgrass and pastures Woolly Croton A warm season annual plant with rounded open-branched spreading growth habit. 1-3' tall and wide. Common in overgrazed pastures; can have some toxicity for livestock. Yellow Nutsedge A perennial from rhizomes and tubers that may reach 2 1/2 feet in height. The stems are 3- sided and triangular in cross section and the leaves are yellow to green in color with a distinct ridge. Found throughout North America as a common weed in agronomic and horticultural crops, nurseries, turfgrass, and landscapes

9/2017 How to Fill out the Seed Identification Form Each participant will receive a blank sheet similar to the one shown in miniature below. It will contain no writing in the blanks when you receive it. Sample No. Crop or Weed Score 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. After you look at the seed or picture, you will write its name in the blank to the right of the proper sample number. Deductions are: Two points for seriously misspelled words. Each correct line has a total value of 5 points.

Crops & Weeds District & State 4-H 0-Rama Exam (Senior Only) 100 Point Value A 25 question exam will be given: multiple choice & true /false Questions will be taken from 2018 Arkansas Grain Sorghum and Quick Fact Sheets Grain Sorghum & Wheat - https://www.uaex.edu/farm-ranch/crops-commercial-horticulture/ Select Grain Sorghum then click on the Quick Facts link. Select Wheat then click on the Quick Facts Link. Quick Facts Sheets may also be requested from your local County Extension Offices. Field Crop Fertilizer Recommendation (Senior Only) 45 Point Value Write a fertilizer recommendation for a row crop for the nutrients: Nitrogen (N), Phosphorus (P), and Potassium (K0 from a soil test report that is provided. The 2018 Fertilizer Recommendation will be for Wheat. Resources for this activity includes: FSA 2153 The Soil Test Report FSA 2118 Understanding the Numbers on Your Soil Test Report Charts will be provided with the recommended rate based on soil test value just as in the Arkansas Row Crop Quick Facts. In years when rice is the focus crop, the rice information sheet recommended Nitrogen Rates & Distribution for Rice Cultivars in Arkansas, will also be provided. Field Crop and Weed ID 100 Point Value (Junior and Senior) Identify 5 common Arkansas field crops (Planting Seed or Pictures) Identify 15 Common Arkansas weeds (Pictures)

Crop & Weed Pictures Large seed roughly as large as or larger than your fingernail and 3/16 inches thick. Yellow or white grain, white to creamy starch inside, dent in crown when dry.

3/8 inches long, 3/16 inches thick, wedge-shaped, seed coat hard and black in color, entirely covered with lint unless acid delinted.

Seed roundish, glumes covering the caryopsis vary in color from straw-red to black, depending on the variety. Hulled seed are reddish, yellow or white, depending on variety.

Long, slender, smooth, straw-colored hull. May have short awn on tip of some grain. White color when hull is removed.

Round seed, yellow, black Hilum.

Wheat Free of lemma and palea, most varieties are rather full and plump; light reddish-brown in color.

Balloonvine is named for its fruits, which occur as inflated capsules with pointed tips. This vine can grow up to 8m high in the canopy. The leaves are made up of nine leaflets, which have toothed margins and are dark green.

A summer annual with thick stems that may reach 5 feet in height. One of the few grass weeds in which ligules are absent. Found throughout the United States, Canada, and Mexico as a weed of many agronomic crops, nurseries, landscape, and turf.

A spreading summer annual that commonly is found growing along the round but with tips ascending. Leaves are mostly hairless but sheaths are hairy and the ligule membrane has a mustache of short hairs. Stems will root at lower nodes. Broadleaf signalgrass may reach as much as 3 feet in height and is found most commonly as a weed of agronomic crops of the southeastern United States.

A low-growing perennial with divided leaves and distinctive yellow flowers. The buttercups are common weeds of turfgrass, lawns, pastures, hay fields, and occasionally landscapes.

A winter annual grass that can reach as much as 3.5 feet in height. Cheat is found in cultivated areas, agronomic crop fields (most notably wheat), pastures, roadsides, and waste areas.

The first true leaves are opposite, while all subsequent leaves are alternate.

Stems below cotyledons (hypocotyls) are green, usually spotted with purple. Cotyledons are roundish to oblong, purple underneath. Young leaves opposite, becoming alternate with age, dense pubescence over entire leaf surface.

Summer annual, having a prostrate or ascending growth habit. Ligule is a thin, fingernail-like membrane without hairs. Leaves and sheaths can be covered with hairs but can also be glabrous. Stems do not root at the nodes. Found throughout the United States

Taprooted perennial, developing a basal rosette of wavy-margined leaves and an unbranched stem that may reach 5 feet in height. Found throughout the United States primarily as a weed of pastures, hay fields, forages, landscapes, and some agronomic crops.

The mature plant is erect and grows to over 1-1/2 feet (about 0.5 m) with bright, waxy green, oval-shaped leaf blades that may be submerged, floating, or held above the water's surface. Sometimes plants develop a creeping horizontal stem.

A clump-forming summer annual with a seedhead that resembles a fox s tail. A weed of many agronomic crops, turf, landscapes, and nurseries

Erect summer annual that may reach 16 feet in height. Leaves are large and distinctively 3-lobed, or less often 5-lobed. Primarily a weed of agronomic crops that thrives in fertile soils. Found throughout the U.S. except the Pacific Coast, areas of the Southwest, and portions of Florida and Maine.

Flattened stems with a distinctive white or silver center. Plants often appear compressed to the soil, as if they have been repeatedly stepped on. A distinctive white center of goosegrass distinguishes it from most other grass weeds

They are herbaceous plants growing to 0.4 3 m tall, similar to the common tomato - a relative - but usually with a stiffer, more upright stem; they can be either annual or perennial.

Erect annual, reaching 3-6 feet in height, with distinctive seed pods and showy yellow flowers. Primarily a weed of agronomic crops found in the coastal plain but occasionally in the piedmonts of North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, Florida, Alabama, Mississippi, and Virginia.

Winter annual with square stems and pink-purple flowers, reaching 16 inches in height. Primarily a weed of turfgrass, landscapes and small grains. Found throughout the United States but most common in the eastern states.

A perennial from rhizomes with conspicuous spines on the leaves and stems that may reach 3 ft in height. Horsenettle is found throughout the southeastern, eastern, and north-central United States. All parts of the plant, except the mature fruit, are poisonous to livestock even when this weed is consumed in dry hay. However, consumption of this weed rarely occurs due to the prickly stems and leaves

A perennial from rhizomes that may reach 6 1/2 feet in height. Johnsongrass is capable of rapidly colonizing a variety of different environments due to the large amounts of seed and rhizomes produced by this plant. Originally introduced as a forage crop, this weed is now one of the most common and troublesome weeds of most agronomic and horticultural crops, as well as roadsides, pastures, and hay fields.

A trailing or climbing annual vine with heart shaped leaves that taper to a point with attractive funnelshaped white flowers. Primarily a weed of agronomic crops, landscapes, nurseries and sometimes in non-crop areas

Dense, compact terminal panicles and relatively tall plants with alternately arranged leaves with petioles that are longer than the leaves.

Red rice plants vary considerably. The tall-growing, black-hulled, awned plant is easiest to recognize and is considered by many to be a typical red rice plant. However, other strains have developed that have straw-colored hulls, are awnless and are about the same height as desirable rice varieties.

A winter annual that may reach 3 ft in height with conspicuous auricles and a distinctive seedhead. Found throughout the United States, primarily as a weed of small grains.

The elliptic to lanceolate leaves with a purple spotted ladys thumb print in the middle and distinctive ocrea are all characteristics that help to distinguish Pennsylvania smartweed from other similar weeds.

A trailing or climbing summer annual vine with leaves that are divided into many leaflets. The vetches are common weeds of roadsides, pastures, landscapes, ornamentals, and some of the winter annuals are weeds of winter small grains.

A perennial from bulblets that emits a strong garlic or onion smell when crushed. Primarily a weed of small grains, turfgrass and pastures.

A warm season annual plant with rounded open-branched spreading growth habit. 1-3 ft. tall and wide. Common in overgrazed pastures; can have some toxicity for livestock.

A perennial from rhizomes and tubers that may reach 2 1/2 feet in height. The stems are 3-sided and triangular in cross section and the leaves are yellow to green in color with a distinct ridge. Found throughout North America as a common weed in agronomic and horticultural crops, nurseries, turfgrass, and landscapes.