Abstract

To estimate the prevalence of herbicide-resistant weeds, 87 wheat and barley farms were randomly surveyed in the Canterbury region of New Zealand. Over 600 weed seed samples from up to 10 mother plants per taxon depending on abundance, were collected immediately prior to harvest (two fields per farm). Some samples provided by agronomists were tested on an ad-hoc basis. Over 40,000 seedlings were grown to the 2-4 leaf stage in glasshouse conditions and sprayed with high priority herbicides for grasses from the three modes-of-action acetyl-CoA carboxylase (ACCase)-inhibitors haloxyfop, fenoxaprop, clodinafop, pinoxaden, clethodim, acetolactate synthase (ALS)-inhibitors iodosulfuron, pyroxsulam, nicosulfuron, and the 5-enolpyruvyl shikimate 3-phosphate synthase (EPSPS)-inhibitor glyphosate. The highest manufacturer recommended label rates were applied for the products registered for use in New Zealand, often higher than the discriminatory rates used in studies elsewhere. Published studies of resistance were rare in New Zealand but we found weeds survived herbicide applications on 42 of the 87 (48%) randomly surveyed farms, while susceptible reference populations died. Resistance was found for ALS-inhibitors on 35 farms (40%) and to ACCase-inhibitors on 20 (23%) farms. The number of farms with resistant weeds (denominator is 87 farms) are reported for ACCase-inhibitors, ALS-inhibitors, and glyphosate respectively as: Avena fatua (9%, 1%, 0% of farms), Bromus catharticus (0%, 2%, 0%), Lolium spp. (17%, 28%, 0%), Phalaris minor (1%, 6%, 0%), and Vulpia bromoides (0%, not tested, 0%). Not all farms had the weeds present, five had no obvious weeds prior to harvest. This survey revealed New Zealand's first documented cases of resistance in P. minor (fenoxaprop, clodinafop, iodosulfuron) and B. catharticus (pyroxsulam). Twelve of the 87 randomly sampled farms (14%) had ALS-inhibitor chlorsulfuron-resistant sow thistles, mostly Sonchus asper but also S. oleraceus. Resistance was confirmed in industry-supplied samples of the grasses Digitaria sanguinalis (nicosulfuron, two maize farms), P. minor (iodosulfuron, one farm), and Lolium spp. (cases included glyphosate, haloxyfop, pinoxaden, iodosulfuron, and pyroxsulam, 9 farms). Industry also supplied Stellaria media samples that were resistant to chlorsulfuron and flumetsulam (ALS-inhibitors) sourced from clover and ryegrass fields from the North and South Island.

Highlights

  • Weed control programs that use herbicides have proven to be cost-effective for improving yields of staple crops by an average of 30% [1], and typically provide a 2-4-fold economic return [2]

  • The results from over 600 samples of grasses collected from two sampling regions are reported, including a total of 87 farms that were near mid-northern Canterbury near Lincoln (52 farms) and southern Canterbury near Timaru (35 farms)

  • The following common weedy grasses were found as survivors prior to harvest on a sizeable number of the 87 farms we visited: A. fatua (52 farms), B. diandrus (16), B. hordeaceus (19), B. catharticus (29), Lolium spp. for suspected hybrids (23), L. multiflorum (38), L. perenne (46), Lolium spp., P. minor (17) and V. bromoides (14)

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Summary

Introduction

Weed control programs that use herbicides have proven to be cost-effective for improving yields of staple crops by an average of 30% [1], and typically provide a 2-4-fold economic return [2]. They are a key element in no-till planting programs for wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) and barley (Hordeum vulgare L.) farms in New Zealand that improve soil structure and prevent soil loss through erosion [3]. Beauv., Lolium multiflorum Lam., L. perenne L., Phalaris minor Retz., and Poa annua L.; these grasses were in the top 10 for risk of developing herbicide resistance)

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