Potatoes are a delicious and versatile vegetable to grow in your garden. But keeping potato plants properly identified can be tricky when weeds invade Several common weeds share similar characteristics with potato plants, making it easy to mix the two up. Being able to spot the differences between potatoes and weedy look-alikes will help ensure your crop thrives
5 Garden Weeds Often Confused With Potato Plants
These 5 pesky weeds are masters of disguise in the garden bed Here’s what to look for to avoid picking them by mistake.
1. Hairy Nightshade
With white flowers and egg-shaped leaves, hairy nightshade bears a strong resemblance to potato foliage. Identify nightshade by the fine hairs covering its stems and leaves Be aware that nightshade berries are toxic
2. Bittersweet Nightshade
Closely related to hairy nightshade, bittersweet nightshade has oval, smooth-edged leaves. Its climbing vines and purple and yellow flowers differentiate it from potato plants. All parts of bittersweet nightshade are poisonous.
3. Jimsonweed
Also called devil’s trumpet, jimsonweed has spear-shaped leaves similar in size and shape to potato leaves. Look for its large, upright white or purple trumpet-shaped flowers to correctly identify this toxic plant.
4. Jerusalem Cherry
Jerusalem cherry is easy to confuse with young potato plants. Giveaways are its smaller oval leaves and bright red berries that emerge in late summer. While not poisonous, Jerusalem cherry fruit is not edible.
5. Black Nightshade
This nightshade variety has lush green leaves, white flowers, and black berries. Leaves are smooth-edged and something tapered compared to the rounded potato leaf. Black nightshade berries are edible when fully ripe.
Key Differences Between Potatoes and Weed Look-Alikes
With so many imposters trying to blend in, focus on these characteristics to pick out the real potato plants:
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Flowers – Potato plants have clusters of white, purple, pink, or lavender delicate flowers. Nightshades have 5-pointed solitary flowers.
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Berries – Potatoes do not produce berries. Finding red or black berries means nightshade.
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Leaves – Potato leaves are oval-shaped with uneven, blunt-toothed edges. Nightshade leaves tend to be more spear or triangle-shaped.
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Stems – Potato stems are thick, rigid, and winged or ridged. Nightshade stems are smooth, thin, and climbing.
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Smell – Crush a potato leaf or stem and it will have an earthy, pungent odor. Nightshades and look-alikes do not smell when crushed.
Tips for Weed Control Among Potato Plants
Preventing weeds from invading potato growing space is key. Here are some tips for keeping imposters at bay:
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At planting, thoroughly prepare soil to remove weed roots and seeds. Dig down 8-12 inches removing all debris.
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Use black plastic mulch at planting to block light and suppress weeds. Cut holes for potato hills.
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Plant potatoes through holes in a 5-6 inch thick layer of straw. The straw blocks light to prevent weed germination.
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In new plantings, carefully hand pull weeds, ensuring you remove the entire root.
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Weed early and often to stop weeds from spreading seeds.
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Hill soil over potato roots as plants grow. This blocks light from reaching emerging weeds.
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Mulch around mature plants with grass clippings or straw. Mulch reduces weed growth.
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Avoid tilling or hoeing deeply mid-season as this brings more weed seeds to the surface. Carefully hand pull weeds instead.
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Rotate potato crop locations annually to prevent weeds from accumulating.
What to Do if You’ve Picked Weeds by Mistake
Oops! If some weedy imposters got harvested along with your potatoes, take these steps:
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Safely discard any questionable plants, berries or foliage. When in doubt, throw it out.
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Do not compost discarded weeds as this can spread seeds. Place in sealed garbage bags.
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Wash all potatoes thoroughly after harvest to remove dirt and weeds.
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Inspect potatoes carefully before cooking or eating. Discard any suspicious pieces.
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When in doubt, do not eat potatoes from a weedy area. Carefully inspect and clean your harvest.
It’s easy to mistake sneaky weeds like nightshade for your potato plants. But learning what makes potatoes unique will help train your eye. Focus on flowers, smell, stems and leaf shape to pick out the pretenders. And implement weed control early and consistently for the healthiest potato crop. With some diligence, you can keep imposters from invading your precious potato patch.
How Does an Air Potato Spread?
Flowering is rare in Florida, so most new plants sprout from aerial tubers (bulbils).
These bulbils can be the size of small marbles or as large as softballs. They grow along the vines and are found on plants during fall. The bulbils drop from the vines in winter (December to February) and sprout in spring. They can be carried over long distances by flowing water.
This versatile plant invades a variety of habitats, including pinelands and natural area hammocks. It can quickly engulf native vegetation in natural areas by climbing high into mature tree canopies.
It is very hard to get rid of air potatoes because new plants can grow from very small bulbils and underground tubers.
What is an Air Potato?
Air potatoes are members of the yam family and native to Asia and sub-Saharan Africa. Louisiana, Mississippi, Texas, Hawaii, and Puerto Rico have also added air potatoes to their states’ lists.
Air potato was added to the Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services Noxious Weed List in 1999. Plants on this list may not be introduced, possessed, moved, or released without a permit.
Air potato is an herbaceous vine that sprouts from underground or aerial tubers. Its stems can grow up to 70 feet in length. The stems are round or slightly angled in cross section and twine to the left (counter-clockwise).
The leaves are alternately arranged along the stem and attached with long stalks. The leaves can grow at least eight inches long and are nearly as wide. The leaves are heart-shaped and have lobes at the base. At the end of the leaf, they taper quickly to a point.
Aerial tubers (bulbils) form in leaf axils. In Florida, bulbil texture and color are variable. There are bumpy bulbils and smooth bulbils. The color of the bulbils can range from light tan to dark brown.
Air potato doesn’t flower very often in Florida, but when it does, the plant can make small, fragrant flowers that grow in loose clusters up to four inches long from the leaf axils. Male and female flowers are found on separate plants. No fruits or male flowers have ever been observed in Florida.
For pictures to use when identifying air potato vines, visit the Center for Aquatic and Invasive Plants’s page on air potato.
Winged yam is another non-native invasive species, similar in appearance to air potato. Like the air potato, it forms aerial bulbils and underground tubers. The stem of the winged yam, on the other hand, twists to the right and has wings or angles on it. The bulbils are also rounder.
Two native wild yams can be found in the hammocks and floodplains of North and West Florida. floridana and D. villosa. These plants never form aerial tubers, and their leaf blades rarely grow to six inches in length. The native species are smaller plants whose vines reach only about 10 feet. Air potato vines can easily grow to six times that size.
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