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Influence of Nitrogen Rate, Seeding Rate, and Weed Removal Timing on Weed Interference in Barley and Effect of Nitrogen on Weed Response to Herbicides

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  04 November 2016

Vipan Kumar
Affiliation:
Postdoctoral Research Associate and Associate Professor, Montana State University, Southern Agricultural Research Center, 748 Railroad Highway, Huntley, MT 59037
Prashant Jha*
Affiliation:
Postdoctoral Research Associate and Associate Professor, Montana State University, Southern Agricultural Research Center, 748 Railroad Highway, Huntley, MT 59037
*
*Corresponding author’s E-mail: pjha@montana.edu
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Abstract

Field experiments were conducted at the Montana State University Southern Agricultural Research Center, Huntley, MT, in 2011 through 2013 to determine the effect of nitrogen (N) rate, seeding rate, and weed removal timing on weed interference in barley. A delay in weed removal timing from the 3- to 4-leaf (LF) stage to the 8- to 10-LF stage of barley resulted in up to 3.5-fold increase in total weed biomass and 10% reduction in barley biomass, and this was unaffected by a N rate that ranged from 56 (low) to 168 (high) kg ha−1. The effect of N rate on barley biomass was more pronounced when weed removal was delayed from the 3- to 4-LF stage to the 8- to 10-LF stage of barley and in nontreated plots. Increasing the barley seeding rate from 38 to 152 kg ha−1 increased the barley plant density by 50%, biomass by 13%, and grain yield by 29%, averaged over N rates and weed removal timing. On the basis of 5 and 10% levels of acceptable yield loss, the addition of ≥112 kg N ha−1 delayed the critical timing of weed removal by at least 1.3 wk in barley, compared with the 56 kg N ha−1 rate. A medium or high N rate prevented reduction in barley grain quality (plumpness and test weight) observed when the seeding rate was increased from 38 to 76 or 152 kg ha−1 at the low N rate. In a separate greenhouse study, the effect of N rate on the effectiveness of various herbicides for controlling wild oat, green foxtail, kochia, or Russian thistle was investigated. Results highlighted that wild oat or green foxtail grown under 56 kg N ha−1 (low N) soil required 1.4 to 2.6 times higher doses of clodinafop, fenoxaprop, flucarbazone, glyphosate, glufosinate, pinoxaden, or tralkoxydim for 50% reduction in shoot dry weights (GR50) compared with plants grown under 168 kg N ha−1 (high N). Similarly, a reduced efficacy of thifensulfuron methyl + tribenuron methyl, metsulfuron methyl, or bromoxynil+pyrasulfotole was observed (evident from the GR50 values) for kochia or Russian thistle grown under low- vs. high-N soil. Information gained from this research will aid in developing cost-effective, integrated weed management (IWM) strategies in cereals and in educating growers on the importance of fertilizer N management as a component of IWM programs.

Information

Type
Weed Management
Copyright
© Weed Science Society of America, 2016 
Figure 0

Figure 1 Daily minimum and maximum air temperatures during the barley-growing seasons in 2011, 2012, and 2013 near Huntley, MT.

Figure 1

Table 1 Nutrient analysis of the top soil layer (0–60 cm depth) from the field site at the Montana State University Southern Agricultural Research Center near Huntley, MT.a,b

Figure 2

Table 2 List of herbicides tested, including their site of action, trade name, doses and adjuvants, and target weed species in the dose–response studies conducted in the greenhouse in 2011 and 2012.a

Figure 3

Table 3 Interaction of N rate and weed removal timing on total weed biomass in barley averaged across seeding rates and three growing seasons (2011–2013).a

Figure 4

Figure 2 Effect of increasing N rate on barley plant height averaged across the three growing seasons (2011–2013). Vertical bars represent the standard error of the mean. Means with the same letter are not significantly different based on Fisher’s protected LSD at P<0.05.

Figure 5

Figure 3 Effect of increasing seeding rate on barley plant density (A), aboveground biomass (B), and grain yield (C) averaged across the three growing seasons (2011–2013). Vertical bars represent the standard error of the mean. Means with the same letter are not significantly different based on Fisher’s protected LSD at P<0.05.

Figure 6

Table 4 Interaction of N rate and weed removal timing on the aboveground barley biomass averaged across seeding rates and three growing seasons (2011–2013).a

Figure 7

Table 5 Parameter estimates for the three-parameter log-logistic model (Equation 1) to determine the effect of increasing duration of weed interference (WAE) on percentage grain yield loss at the three N rates based on 5 and 10% AYL levels. The model was fitted to barley grain yield (% of season-long weed-free) as a function of increasing duration of broadleaf weed interference (WAE).ad

Figure 8

Figure 4 Effects of N rate and seeding rate on kernel plumpness and test weight of barley averaged across the three growing seasons. Means across seeding rates for each N level with the same letter are not significantly different based on Fisher’s protected LSD at P<0.05.

Figure 9

Figure 5 Effect of N rate on barley grain protein averaged across the three growing seasons (2011–2013). Vertical bars represent standard error of the mean. Means with the same letter are not significantly different based on Fisher’s protected LSD at P<0.05.

Figure 10

Table 6 Regression parameters from the three-parameter log-logistic model used to fit shoot dry weights (% of nontreated) of herbicide-treated wild oat (AVFA) and green foxtail (SEVI) grown under low (56 kg ha−1) or high (168 kg ha−1) soil N.ac

Figure 11

Table 7 Regression parameters from the three-parameter log-logistic model used to fit shoot dry weights (% of nontreated) of herbicide-treated kochia (KOSC) and Russian thistle (SATR) grown under low (56 kg ha−1) or high (168 kg ha−1) N soil.ac