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Preemergence herbicide premixes reduce the risk of soil residual weed control failure in corn

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  29 June 2023

Tatiane Severo Silva*
Affiliation:
Ph.D, Postdoctoral Research Associate, Department of Agronomy, University of Wisconsin–Madison, Madison, WI, USA
Nicholas John Arneson
Affiliation:
Outreach Program Manager, University of Wisconsin–Madison, Madison, WI, USA
Ryan P. DeWerff
Affiliation:
Research Specialist, University of Wisconsin–Madison, Madison, WI, USA
Daniel H Smith
Affiliation:
Southwest Regional Agronomist, Nutrient and Pest Management Program, University of Wisconsin–Madison, Madison, WI, USA
Daniel Valadão Silva
Affiliation:
Assistant Professor, Department of Agronomy, Federal Rural University of the Semi-Arid Region, Mossoro, Brazil
Rodrigo Werle
Affiliation:
Associate Professor, Department of Agronomy, University of Wisconsin–Madison, Madison, WI, USA
*
Corresponding author: Tatiane Severo Silva; Email: severosilva@wisc.edu
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Abstract

Widespread occurrence of herbicide-resistant weeds and more variable weather conditions across the United States has made weed control in many crops more challenging. Preemergence (PRE) herbicides with soil residual activity have resurged as the foundation for early season weed control in many crops. Field experiments were conducted in Janesville and Lancaster, Wisconsin, in 2021 and 2022 (4 site-years) to evaluate the weed control efficacy of solo (single site of action [SOA]) and premix (two or more SOAs) PRE herbicides in conventional tillage corn. Treatments consisted of 18 PRE herbicides plus a nontreated check. At the Janesville-2021 site, S-metolachlor + bicyclopyrone + mesotrione, atrazine + S-metolachlor + bicyclopyrone + mesotrione, and clopyralid + acetochlor + mesotrione provided >72% giant ragweed control. At the Janesville-2022 site, none of the PRE herbicides evaluated provided >70% giant ragweed control due to the high giant ragweed density and the lack of timely rainfall. At the Lancaster-2021 site, atrazine, dicamba, and flumetsulam + clopyralid provided <45% waterhemp control, but the remaining treatments provided >90% control. At the Lancaster-2022 site, the efficacy of some PRE herbicides was reduced due to the high waterhemp density; however, most herbicides provided >75% control. At the Lancaster-2021 and Lancaster-2022 sites, only dicamba and S-metolachlor did not provide >75% common lambsquarters control. Group 15 PRE herbicides provided >75% control of giant foxtail. Across weed species, PRE herbicides with two (78%) and three (81%) SOAs provided greater weed control than PRE herbicides with a single SOA (68%), indicating that at least two SOA herbicides applied PRE result in better early season weed control. The efficacy of the PRE herbicide treatments evaluated herein varied according to the soil seedbank weed community composition and environmental conditions (i.e., rainfall following application), but the premixes were a more reliable option to improve early season weed control in conventional tillage corn.

Information

Type
Research Article
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution and reproduction, provided the original article is properly cited.
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2023. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of the Weed Science Society of America
Figure 0

Table 1. PRE herbicides evaluated in the corn field experiments.

Figure 1

Table 2. Soil properties, corn hybrids, seeding rates, and planting and herbicide application dates for corn field experiments.a

Figure 2

Figure 1. Mean daily air temperature and total cumulative precipitation at the experimental sites in Janesville (left) and Lancaster (right), Wisconsin, in 2021 (top) and 2022 (bottom) during the corn field experiment.

Figure 3

Figure 2. Giant ragweed control (% of nontreated control; left) and biomass reduction (% of nontreated control; right) in Janesville, Wisconsin, 2021 at 6 wk after treatment and 2022 at 4 wk after treatment. Jittered points represent replicates, centered solid points denote the means, and error bars represent the upper and lower 95% confidence interval limits. Means were compared using Fisher’s LSD, and herbicide treatments with the same letters are not different at α = 0.05. Numbers in parentheses in the y-axis represent the site of action of each herbicide treatment. Abbreviations: DICAM, dicamba; ATZ, atrazine; SMZ, simazine; ACET, acetochlor; S-MET, S-metolachlor; IFT, isoxaflutole; MES, mesotrione; TCM, thiencarbazone-methyl; SAFL, saflufenacil; DIM-P, dimethenamid-P; FLUM, flumetsulam; CLOP, clopyralid; BIP, bicyclopyrone; PYRO, pyroxasulfone.

Figure 4

Figure 3. Control (% of nontreated control) of giant ragweed at the Janesville site (6 wk after treatment [WAT] in 2021 and 4 WAT 2022), waterhemp (2021 and 2022), common lambsquarters (2021 and 2022), and giant foxtail (2022) at the Lancaster, Wisconsin site (6 WAT), and all data combined across species based on herbicide treatments with a single, two, and three sites of action applied PRE in corn.

Figure 5

Figure 4. Waterhemp control (% of nontreated control; left) and biomass reduction (% of nontreated control; right) in Lancaster, Wisconsin, 2021 and 2022 at 6 wk after treatment. Jittered points represent replicates, centered solid points denote the means, and error bars represent the upper and lower 95% confidence interval limits. Means were compared using Fisher’s LSD, and herbicide treatments with the same letters are not different at α = 0.05. Numbers in parentheses in the y-axis represent the site of action of each herbicide. Abbreviations: DICAM, dicamba; ATZ, atrazine; SMZ, simazine; ACET, acetochlor; S-MET, S-metolachlor; IFT, isoxaflutole; MES, mesotrione; TCM, thiencarbazone-methyl; SAFL, saflufenacil; DIM-P, dimethenamid-P; FLUM, flumetsulam; CLOP, clopyralid; BIP, bicyclopyrone; PYRO, pyroxasulfone.

Figure 6

Figure 5. Common lambsquarters control (% of nontreated control; left) and biomass reduction (% of nontreated control; right) in Lancaster, Wisconsin, 2021 and 2022 at 6 wk after treatment. Jittered points represent replicates, centered solid points denote the means, and error bars represent the upper and lower 95% confidence interval limits. Means were compared using Fisher’s LSD, and herbicide treatments with the same letters are not different at α = 0.05. Numbers in parentheses in the y-axis represent the site of action of each herbicide. Abbreviations: DICAM, dicamba; ATZ, atrazine; SMZ, simazine; ACET, acetochlor; S-MET, S-metolachlor; IFT, isoxaflutole; MES, mesotrione; TCM, thiencarbazone-methyl; SAFL, saflufenacil; DIM-P, dimethenamid-P; FLUM, flumetsulam; CLOP, clopyralid; BIP, bicyclopyrone; PYRO, pyroxasulfone.

Figure 7

Figure 6. Giant foxtail control (% of nontreated control; left) and biomass reduction (% of nontreated control; right) in Lancaster, Wisconsin, 2022 at 6 wk after treatment. Jittered points represent replicates, centered solid points denote the means, and error bars represent the upper and lower 95% confidence interval limits. Means were compared using Fisher’s LSD, and herbicide treatments with the same letters are not different at α = 0.05. Numbers in parentheses in the y-axis represent the site of action of each herbicide. Abbreviations: DICAM, dicamba; ATZ, atrazine; SMZ, simazine; ACET, acetochlor; S-MET, S-metolachlor; IFT, isoxaflutole; MES, mesotrione; TCM, thiencarbazone-methyl; SAFL, saflufenacil; DIM-P, dimethenamid-P; FLUM, flumetsulam; CLOP, clopyralid; BIP, bicyclopyrone; PYRO, pyroxasulfone.

Figure 8

Figure 7. Pearson’s linear correlation between weed control (% of nontreated control) and weed biomass reduction (% of nontreated control) for giant ragweed, waterhemp, common lambsquarters, and giant foxtail at the Janesville and Lancaster locations in 2021 and 2022 combined. The correlation (R) is 0.88 (lower confidence interval [CI] 0.86 to upper CI 0.89) with P-value < 0.001. The blue line represents the linear trend and the shaded area the 95% CI.