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1 November 2017 Developing an Integrated Weed Management System for Herbicide-Resistant Weeds Using Lentil (Lens culinaris) as a Model Crop
Colleen Redlick, Lena D. Syrovy, Hema S. N. Duddu, Dilshan Benaragama, Eric N. Johnson, Christian J. Willenborg, Steven J. Shirtliffe
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Abstract

The escalating evolution of weed species resistant to acetolactase synthase (ALS)-inhibitor herbicides makes alternative weed control strategies necessary for field crops that are dependent on this herbicide group. A fully integrated strategy that combined increased crop seeding rates (2X or 4X recommended), mechanical weed control with a minimum-tillage rotary hoe, and reduced-rate non—ALS inhibitor herbicides was compared with herbicides, rotary hoe, and seeding rates alone as a method of controlling ALS inhibitor—tolerant Indian mustard as a model weed. The full-rate herbicide treatment had the lowest weed biomass (98% reduction) and the highest yield of all treatments in 3 of 4 site-years, regardless of seeding rate. The fully integrated treatment at the 4X seeding rate had weed suppression rates equal to the full herbicide treatment at the recommended seeding rate. The fully integrated and reduced-rate herbicide treatments at the 4X seeding rate reduced weed biomass by 89% and 83%, respectively, compared with the control at the recommended seeding rate. The rotary hoe treatment alone resulted in poor weed control (≤38%), even at the highest seeding rate. Fully integrated and reduced-rate herbicide treatments at 2X and 4X seeding rates had yields equal to those of the full herbicide treatment at the recommended seeding rate. Partially or fully integrated weed control strategies that combine increased crop seeding rates and reduced-rate non—ALS inhibitor herbicides, with or without the use of a rotary hoe, can control weeds resistant to ALS-inhibitor herbicides, while maintaining crop yields similar to those achieved with full-rate herbicides. However, combining increased seeding rate, reduced-rate herbicides, and mechanical rotary hoe treatment into a fully integrated strategy maximized weed control, while reducing reliance on and selection pressure against any single weed control tactic.

Nomenclature: Indian mustard, Brassica juncea (L.) Czern.

© Weed Science Society of America, 2017
Colleen Redlick, Lena D. Syrovy, Hema S. N. Duddu, Dilshan Benaragama, Eric N. Johnson, Christian J. Willenborg, and Steven J. Shirtliffe "Developing an Integrated Weed Management System for Herbicide-Resistant Weeds Using Lentil (Lens culinaris) as a Model Crop," Weed Science 65(6), 778-786, (1 November 2017). https://doi.org/10.1017/wsc.2017.47
Received: 12 December 2016; Accepted: 1 June 2017; Published: 1 November 2017
KEYWORDS
Canola-quality mustard
cultivation
cultural control
integrated pest management
integrated weed management
mechanical weed control
metribuzin
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