Abstract

Red rice is one of the major troublesome and difficult weeds to control in rice production regions. The introduction of the Clearfield&#174 technology allowed producers to control red rice using rice genotypes tolerant to the imidazolinone herbicides. However, because the consecutive use of this technology red rice biotypes have evolved resistance to imidazolinone herbicides, the rice-soybean rotation has been an alternative used by producers to control this weed. This system allows the use of herbicides with different modes of action to control red rice, such as S-metolachlor. Thus, greenhouse and field experiments were carried out during the 2011 to 2012 and 2012 to 2013 growing seasons to evaluate: 1) sensitivity of imidazolinone-resistant red rice to S-metolachlor; 2) red rice control and soybean tolerance in response to associations of S-metolachlor and glyphosate. In greenhouse, S-metolachlor effectively controlled both susceptible and imidazolinone-resistant red rice in preemergence. In field, preemergence applications of S-metolachlor provided greater red rice control in comparison to S-metolachlor alone in early postemergence. The association of S-metolachlor with glyphosate did not improve red rice control in preemergence application. However, association of S-metolachlor with glyphosate significantly improved red rice control in early postemergence applications. S-metolachlor injury to soybean increased with early postemergence applications. These results indicate that S-metolachlor effectively control imidazolinone-resistant red rice in rice-soybean rotation.

Highlights

  • Red rice (Oryza sativa L.) is one of the major troublesome weeds of irrigated rice in the Southern Brazil and in various rice producing regions worldwide [1]-[3]

  • Differences on CT50, EST50 and GR50 were observed between application timings

  • Lower S-metolachlor rate was required to achieve 50% red rice control in PRE compared to POST application

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Red rice (Oryza sativa L.) is one of the major troublesome weeds of irrigated rice in the Southern Brazil and in various rice producing regions worldwide [1]-[3]. This weed belongs to the same species of cultivated rice sharing many morphological and physiological characteristics [4]. Red rice typically exhibits seed dormancy, grows taller, and produces more tillers and biomass than cultivated rice [5]. It has greater nitrogen efficiency under competitive conditions, absorbing up to 60% of applied N fertilizer [2]. Because the continued use of the Clearfield® rice and minimal alternative cultural practices being adopted concomitantly, several red rice biotypes have evolved resistance to the imidazolinone herbicides [10]-[12]

Objectives
Methods
Results
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call