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1 July 2004 Response of paraquat-resistant and -susceptible horseweed (Conyza canadensis) to diquat, linuron, and oxyfluorfen
Susan Weaver, Michael Downs, Brandi Neufeld
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Abstract

Horseweed is a winter annual weed that has evolved resistance to multiple herbicide modes of action in 11 countries worldwide. A paraquat-resistant horseweed population in an Ontario orchard that was being managed by a rotation of herbicides began to show increased tolerance to the herbicide linuron. Experiments were conducted in the greenhouse to compare the response of this population and several paraquat-susceptible populations to linuron, diquat, and oxyfluorfen. Plants were sprayed with a range of doses of each herbicide when they were from 5 to 10 wk old, and the ED50, or dose at which shoot dry weight was reduced by 50%, was estimated. There was a sevenfold difference in the ED50 values of the paraquat-resistant and -susceptible populations in response to diquat and a threefold difference in response to linuron. The response to oxyfluorfen was age dependent. The ratio of resistance to susceptible ED50 values was estimated as 57 for 5-wk-old plants and 11 for 8-wk-old plants in response to oxyfluorfen. Ten-week-old plants from both populations showed no response to oxyfluorfen at rates up to 4.8 kg ai ha−1.

Nomenclature: Diquat; linuron; oxyfluorfen; paraquat; horseweed, Conyza canadensis L. ERICA.

Susan Weaver, Michael Downs, and Brandi Neufeld "Response of paraquat-resistant and -susceptible horseweed (Conyza canadensis) to diquat, linuron, and oxyfluorfen," Weed Science 52(4), 549-553, (1 July 2004). https://doi.org/10.1614/WS-03-102R
Received: 30 June 2003; Accepted: 1 November 2003; Published: 1 July 2004
KEYWORDS
Canada fleabane
cross-resistance
Herbicide resistance
multiple resistance
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