Abstract

AbstractBASF Corp. has developed p-hydroxyphenylpyruvate dioxygenase (HPPD) inhibitor–resistant cotton and soybean that will allow growers to use isoxaflutole in future weed management programs. In 2019 and 2020, a multi-state non-crop research project was conducted to examine weed control following isoxaflutole applied preemergence alone and with several tank-mix partners at high and low labeled rates. At 28 d after treatment (DAT), Palmer amaranth was controlled ≥95% at six of seven locations with isoxaflutole plus the high rate of diuron or fluridone. These same combinations provided the greatest control 42 DAT at four of seven locations. Where large crabgrass was present, isoxaflutole plus the high rate of diuron, fluridone, pendimethalin, or S-metolachlor or isoxaflutole plus the low rate of fluometuron controlled large crabgrass ≥95% in two of three locations 28 DAT. In two of three locations, isoxaflutole plus the high rate of pendimethalin or S-metolachlor improved large crabgrass control 42 DAT when compared to isoxaflutole alone. At 21 DAT, morningglory was controlled ≥95% at all locations with isoxaflutole plus the high rate of diuron and at three of four locations with isoxaflutole plus the high rate of fluometuron. At 42 DAT at all locations, isoxaflutole plus diuron or fluridone and isoxaflutole plus the high rate of fluometuron improved morningglory control compared to isoxaflutole alone. These results suggest that isoxaflutole applied preemergence alone or in tank mixture is efficacious on a number of cross-spectrum annual weeds in cotton, and extended weed control may be achieved when isoxaflutole is tank-mixed with several soil-residual herbicides.

Highlights

  • University Press on behalf of the Weed ScienceSociety of America

  • Diuron, S-metolachlor, and fluridone were most effective when tank-mixed with isoxaflutole, whereas tank-mixing isoxaflutole with pendimethalin or

  • Fluridone is an HRAC Group 27 herbicide and shares isoxaflutole’s mode of action, it binds to a different enzyme; tank-mixing with this active ingredient would be considered similar to other herbicide modes of action and would help slow the development of weed resistance to hydroxyphenylpyruvate dioxygenase (HPPD)-inhibiting herbicides (Sandmann et al 1991)

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Summary

Introduction

Creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. From the onset to the peak of the Roundup Ready® (glyphosate-resistant crops) era, the use of soil-residual herbicides decreased, because postemergence-topical applications of glyphosate effectively controlled most weed species (Faircloth et al 2001; Young 2006). The increased use of glyphosate without other modes of action and tillage provided the selection pressure for glyphosate-resistant weeds. Soil-active herbicides are important tools for cotton growers because of their broad-spectrum efficacy and ability to control herbicide-resistant Palmer amaranth plants before they become troublesome (Price et al 2008)

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