LSU AgCenter
TOPICS
SERVICES
twittertwitter
facebookfacebook
audioaudio
videovideo
labslabs
facilitiesfacilities
weatherweather
calendarcalendar
rssrss
blogsblogs
Go Local
4-H
Forever LSU
eExtension.org
   News You Can Use
 Home>News Archive>2010>June>News You Can Use>

Put the sun’s heat to good use

News Release Distributed 06/18/10

By LSU AgCenter Horticulturists
Dan Gill, Kyle Huffstickler and Allen Owings

The extraordinary heat we experience in summer in Louisiana can be put to good use in the vegetable garden. Through solarization – a process of using sunlight to heat soil in beds under clear plastic – summer heat can be used to reduce the harmful effects of pathogenic fungi and nematodes and kill weed seeds in the soil without using toxic chemicals.

Solarization can be an important part of sustainable gardening, which seeks to minimize the use of pesticides. It fits in well as part of an Integrated Pest Management (IPM) approach to controlling pests in your vegetable garden. Gardeners who practice IPM use cultural practices, variety selection, nonchemical pest control techniques and least-toxic pesticides to sensibly and safely manage pests.

Soil-borne fungi are responsible for such diseases as root rots, crown rots, fruit rots and wilts. Nematodes are microscopic round worms that attack plant roots and cause plants to be stunted and sickly. Most garden beds include many weed seeds just waiting to germinate and grow. These soil-borne problems are not easy for the home gardener to control and are often particularly bad where the same type of vegetable is planted into the same area year after year.

Solarization can only be used to treat empty beds located in full sun. As you remove vegetable crops that have finished producing – or if you have beds that are currently empty – you will have the perfect opportunity to solarize the beds over the next few months.

Thoroughly water the beds you want to solarize a day or two before you begin the process. Then cultivate the soil to a depth of 6-8 inches, breaking up all the large clods. Try to get the soil as fine as you can because large clods could insulate nematodes and microorganisms and allow them to survive.

After turning the soil, incorporate a 2- to 4-inch layer of organic matter, such as grass clippings, leaf mold, compost or rotted manure. Adding the organic matter appears to enhance the solarization process, possibly because when the soil and organic matter mixture heats up under the clear plastic, it produces gasses, some of which are toxic to soil pests such as fungi, nematodes and weed seeds.

Next, dig a trench several inches deep around the bed and place clear plastic over the bed, laying the edges of the plastic down in the trenches. Fill in the trenches with soil to seal tightly the edges of the plastic all around each bed. Don’t use black plastic because it will not heat the soil as well. The idea is for the sunlight to shine through the plastic and the heat to be trapped underneath – just like in a car with the windows rolled up in a parking lot on a sunny summer day.

The clear plastic traps the heat of the sun underneath and raises the temperature of the soil surprisingly high. The upper 6-8 inches of soil in covered beds will gradually reach temperatures between 100 and 130 degrees – high enough to kill nematodes, fungi and weed seeds. The highest temperatures occur in the upper 2 to 3 inches.

Current research recommends the treatment last for at least six weeks. Keeping your beds covered from June or early July until fall planting in late August or early September should allow plenty of time for the treatment to be effective.

When you get ready to plant the treated beds, pull back the plastic and let the beds cool down for a few days. Don’t turn the soil in the bed prior to planting. This can bring up from deeper in the soil weed seeds that may not have been killed by solarization. Weed seeds will not germinate if they are not close to the soil surface. If you need to apply fertilizer to the bed, sprinkle it on the surface and lightly scratch it into the upper inch of soil.

When it comes to planting beds that have been solarized, you have a couple of choices. After the soil has cooled, you can direct-seed vegetables or plant transplants. Immediately mulch beds planted with transplants but wait on the beds that were direct-seeded until the seedlings are large enough to grow above the mulch. Good mulching materials include pine straw, leaves, chopped leaves and dried grass clippings.

Populations of soil disease organisms and weed seeds will eventually build back up. The beneficial effects of solarization generally don’t last beyond a season or two, but you can help the benefits to last longer by doing a couple of things.

One – thoroughly clean all garden tools before you use them in treated beds. It is very easy to carry organisms from infested areas in the soil that clings to your tools.

Two – keep beds and surrounding areas well weeded and never allow weeds to make seeds.

Three – as much as possible, rotate your vegetable crops. Avoid planting the same crop in the same area year after year because that encourages the buildup of disease organisms that will attack that crop.

Visit LaHouse in Baton Rouge to see sustainable landscape practices in action. The home and landscape resource center is near the intersection of Burbank Drive and Nicholson Drive (Louisiana Highway 30) in Baton Rouge, across the street from the LSU baseball stadium. For more information, go to www.louisianahouse.org and www.lsuagcenter.com/lyn.

Rick Bogren

Last Updated: 1/3/2011 1:32:22 PM

Have a question or comment about the information on this page?
Click here to contact us.