He and team members Richard Smith (UCCE Farm Advisor) and Nelly Guerra (UC Davis Fennimore Lab graduate student) evaluated automated weeders that were trained using artificial intelligence for use in lettuce fields. In tests last year near Salinas, Calif., smart weeders built by FarmWise Labs Inc. and Stout Industrial Technology, Inc., removed between 32 percent and nearly 100 percent of purslane and other weeds, Fennimore said. That reduced the need for hand-weeding between 13 and 62 percent. The weeders proved more cost-effective in fields where there were more weeds, Fennimore added.
The team also tested steam to clear soil of diseases that cause leafy greens to wilt and turn brown at the edges. During trials last summer in the Salinas Valley and in Yuma, Ariz., team members measured soil pathogens before and after steaming the rows where seed is planted. They found significant reduction in the fungus fusarium; in the tiny balls, or microsclerotia, that allow fungus to survive in the soil; and in pythium, a water-born mold. Steam treatments also boosted lettuce yield and reduced weeds. The team collaborated with Mark Siemens, of the University of Arizona.
Building on those successes, Fennimore and team this year are combining steam with standard cultivation to see if they can control weeds 100 percent and reduce hand-weeding to zero.
Source : ucanr.edu