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Season-long weed control with sequential herbicide programs in California tree nut crops

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  30 June 2020

Caio A. C. G. Brunharo
Affiliation:
Assistant Professor, Department of Crop and Soil Science, Oregon State University, Corvallis, OR, USA
Seth Watkins
Affiliation:
Staff Research Associate, Department of Plant Sciences, University of California, Davis, CA, USA
Bradley D. Hanson*
Affiliation:
UCCE Weed Science Specialist, Department of Plant Sciences, University of California–Davis, Davis, CA, USA.
*
Author for correspondence: Bradley D. Hanson, Department of Plant Sciences, MS-4, University of California–Davis, One Shields Avenue, Davis, CA 95616. Email: bhanson@ucdavis.edu
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Abstract

Weed control in tree nut orchards is a year-round challenge for growers that is particularly intense during winter through summer as a result of competition and interference with management and harvest operations. A common weed control program consists of an application of a winter PRE and POST herbicide mixture, followed by a desiccation treatment in early spring and before harvest. Because most spring and summer treatments depend on a limited number of foliar-applied herbicides, summer-germinating species and/or herbicide-resistant biotypes become troublesome. Previous research has established effective PRE herbicide programs targeting winter glyphosate-resistant weeds. However, more recently, growers have reported difficulties in controlling several summer-germinating grass weeds with documented or suspected resistance to the spring and summer POST herbicide programs. In this context, research was conducted to evaluate a sequential PRE approach to control winter- and summer-germinating orchard weeds. Eight field experiments were conducted in tree nut orchards to evaluate the efficacy of common winter herbicide programs and a sequential herbicide program for control of a key summer grass weed species. In the sequential-application strategy, three foundational herbicide programs applied in the winter were either mixed with pendimethalin, followed with pendimethalin in March, or applied as a split application of pendimethalin in both winter and spring. Results indicate that the addition of pendimethalin enhanced summer grass weed control throughout the crop growing season by up to 31%. Applying all or part of the pendimethalin in the spring improved control of the summer grass weed junglerice by up to 49%. The lower rate of pendimethalin applied in the spring performed as well as the high rate in the winter, suggesting opportunities for reducing herbicide inputs. Tailoring sequential herbicide programs to address specific weed challenges can be a viable strategy for improving orchard weed control without increasing herbicide use in some situations.

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 in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2020. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of Weed Science Society of America
Figure 0

Figure 1. California map with field experiment locations. Data points are slightly shifted to avoid stacking for clarity of presentation.

Figure 1

Table 1. Sources of herbicides used in the orchard weed control experiments.

Figure 2

Table 2. Winter herbicide programs for Erigeron bonariensis (ERIBO) and Echinochloa colona (ECHCO) control in California almond orchard large-plot experiments.

Figure 3

Table 3. Winter herbicide programs for Erigeron bonariensis (ERIBO) and Echinochloa colona (ECHCO) control in California almond orchards small-plot experiments at multiple locations and years.

Figure 4

Table 4. Sequential treatments, rates, and application timing in walnut orchards in Tulare County, CA.

Figure 5

Figure 2. Junglerice control 8 mo after winter herbicide treatments and 5 mo after the spring sequential pendimethalin treatments at Tulare 1 and Tulare 2. Gray bars represent untreated or winter-only treatments, and yellow bars represent sequential programs. Means followed by same letter are not statistically different. Treatments (in g ai ha–1): (1) nontreated; (2) indaziflam 51; (3) indaziflam 51 + pendimethalin 4,260; (4) indaziflam 51 followed by (fb) pendimethalin 2,130; (5) indaziflam 51 fb pendimethalin 4,260; (6) indaziflam 51 + pendimethalin 2,130 fb pendimethalin 2,130, (7) penoxsulam/oxyfluorfen 17/826; (8) penoxsulam/oxyfluorfen 17/826 + pendimethalin 4,260; (9) penoxsulam/oxyfluorfen 17/826 fb pendimethalin 2,130; (10) penoxsulam/oxyfluorfen 17/826 fb pendimethalin 4,260; (11) penoxsulam/oxyfluorfen 17/826 + pendimethalin 2,130 fb pendimethalin 2,130; (12) flumioxazin 357; (13) flumioxazin 357 + pendimethalin 4,260; (14) flumioxazin 357 fb pendimethalin 2,130; (15) flumioxazin 357 fb pendimethalin 4,260; (16) flumioxazin 357 + pendimethalin 2,130 fb pendimethalin 2,130.

Figure 6

Figure 3. Junglerice biomass 8 mo after the winter herbicide treatments and 5 mo after the spring sequential pendimethalin treatments at Tulare 1. Gray bars represent untreated or winter-only treatments, and yellow bars represent sequential programs. Means followed by same letter are not statistically different. Treatments (in g ai ha–1): (1) Nontreated; (2) indaziflam 51; (3) indaziflam 51 + pendimethalin 4,260; (4) indaziflam 51 followed by (fb) pendimethalin 2,130; (5) indaziflam 51 fb pendimethalin 4,260; (6) indaziflam 51 + pendimethalin 2,130 fb pendimethalin 2,130; (7) penoxsulam/oxyfluorfen 17/826; (8) penoxsulam/oxyfluorfen 17/826 + pendimethalin 4,260; (9) penoxsulam/oxyfluorfen 17/826 fb pendimethalin 2,130; (10) penoxsulam/oxyfluorfen 17/826 fb pendimethalin 4,260; (11) penoxsulam/oxyfluorfen 17/826 + pendimethalin 2,130 fb pendimethalin 2,130; (12) flumioxazin 357; (13) flumioxazin 357 + pendimethalin 4,260; (14) flumioxazin 357 fb pendimethalin 2,130; (15) flumioxazin 357 fb pendimethalin 4,260; (16) flumioxazin 357 + pendimethalin 2,130 fb pendimethalin 2,130.

Figure 7

Figure 4. Junglerice biomass 8 mo after winter herbicide treatments and 5 mo after the spring sequential pendimethalin treatments at Tulare 2. Gray bars represent untreated or winter-only treatments, and yellow bars represent sequential programs. Means followed by same letter are not statistically different. Treatments (in g ai ha–1): (1) nontreated; (2) indaziflam 51; (3) indaziflam 51 + pendimethalin 4,260; (4) indaziflam 51 followed by (fb) pendimethalin 2,130; (5) indaziflam 51 fb pendimethalin 4,260; (6) indaziflam 51 + pendimethalin 2,130 fb pendimethalin 2,130; (7) penoxsulam/oxyfluorfen 17/826; (8) penoxsulam/oxyfluorfen 17/826 + pendimethalin 4,260; (9) penoxsulam/oxyfluorfen 17/826 fb pendimethalin 2,130; (10) penoxsulam/oxyfluorfen 17/826 fb pendimethalin 4,260; (11) penoxsulam/oxyfluorfen 17/826 + pendimethalin 2,130 fb pendimethalin 2,130; (12) flumioxazin 357; (13) flumioxazin 357 + pendimethalin 4,260; (14) flumioxazin 357 fb pendimethalin 2,130; (15) flumioxazin 357 fb pendimethalin 4,260; (16) flumioxazin 357 + pendimethalin 2,130 fb pendimethalin 2,130.

Figure 8

Table 5. Contrast analysis of treatment groups.