Farmer removes Black Grass from a field of wheat

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Researchers helping farmers tackle deadly weed wreaking havoc across English countryside

Researchers from the University of Hull are helping alleviate the devastating impact of a herbicide resistant weed, which costs UK farmers over half a billion pounds in gross profit each year.

Black Grass outcompetes cereal crops for light and space – destroying enough wheat to bake more than 1.5 billion loaves of bread a year – or brew eight billion pints of beer.

Farmers have become so desperate to reduce or eradicate Black Grass, some have even resorted to destroying their own crops in a desperate attempt to control it.

University of Hull researcher testing and growing Black Grass
University of Hull researcher testing and growing Black Grass
Farmer removes Black Grass from a field of wheat
Farmer removes Black Grass from a field of wheat

Dr Sarah Shaw, a Senior Lecturer & Researcher at Hull University Business School who led the research, said: “Farmers were already doing a brilliant job of altering their practices to manage Black Grass, including spring cropping and spraying, but we need game-changing research from other disciplines to address the problem. We wanted to find real solutions in order to help reduce this financial burden.”

The team used machine learning technology to monitor the growing cycle of the weed in order to help farmers optimise chemical treatment and fertiliser use.

Dr Shaw said: “In optimising the treatment, we were able to have a real impact on the environment.

The crop pre-emergence stage is the most carbon intensive and costly because of the huge reliance on chemicals and we need to change this.

Dr Sarah Shaw

Farmers spend approximately £112 per hectare on chemicals and other interventions (such as diesel for applying chemicals) to protect their crops. The chemicals and diesel have a subsequent carbon footprint of 118kg of CO2e per hectare. The UK agricultural sector is a significant producer of carbon, and Black Grass is further intensifying that challenge, impacting food security.

The team created a cost and carbon footprint mapping tool to accurately calculate the financial and environmental impact of Black Grass on farmers.

Researcher from the University of Hull takes soil seed cores to test for Black Grass seed contamination
Researcher from the University of Hull takes soil seed cores to test for Black Grass seed contamination
Black Grass plant flowering and developing a seed head in a field of wheat
Black Grass plant flowering and developing a seed head in a field of wheat

The carbon mapping tool calculates the carbon footprint associated with the chemical treatment used by farmers and diesel consumed around Black Grass management. This tool can be used to map the entire (Scope 3) carbon footprint of UK agricultural supply chains.

Managed by the University’s Aura Innovation Centre, which brings low-carbon ideas to life, the project brought together five farmers from across the region as well as experts from the University’s Business School and Departments of Biology, Geography, Geology and Computer Science.

M600 Pro Drone preparing for flight to monitor Black Grass growth amongst cereal crops
M600 Pro Drone preparing for flight to monitor Black Grass growth amongst cereal crops

Rob Meadley, Farmer and Agricultural Business Consultant at Brown & Co, said “As farmers in East Yorkshire we face a significant challenge managing the invasive grassweed Black Grass. The insight the University of Hull have provided in the research has helped further my understanding of the weed and allowed me to think much wider regarding early identification and potential ways to deal with it.

It is a great experience to be involved with a leading research team where your knowledge and understanding of what you do day-to-day can be looked at and questioned in different ways. I look forward to continued involvement with the research team.

Rob Meadley

The team continue to work on the project, with links between Black Grass and conditions such as water content, geology, organic material and a soil seed index now being explored, to give farmers practical solutions on how to manage the weed.

The research, which was led by Hull University Business School and the University’s Aura Innovation Centre, was undertaken by a multi-disciplinary research team. The team included: Dr Sarah Shaw; Dave Dawson – AURA Innovation – Innovation Manager; Linda Whicker; Antonio C Malfense Fierro; Professor Graham Ferrier; Dr Rodney Forster; Dr Chun Keat; Ollie Dawes at Hull Marine Laboratory; and research assistants Rick McCumskay and Joy Morandin Rettori.

For further information on this research project and how the University of Hull can help with cost and carbon mapping, please contact j.bishop@hull.ac.uk

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