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1 January 2003 Effect of Imazamox Soil Persistence on Dryland Rotational Crops
DANIEL A. BALL, JOSEPH P. YENISH, THEODORE ALBY
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Abstract

Imazamox is an imidazolinone herbicide being developed for weed control in imidazolinone-resistant wheat (IMI-wheat) cultivars and various legume crops. In a series of studies conducted under a range of dryland cropping environments in the Pacific Northwest United States, imazamox applied to IMI-wheat or pea injured barley and canola grown 1 yr after imazamox treatment in low-rainfall, low–soil pH locations of Oregon. Injury was not observed in higher rainfall locations near Pullman, WA. Non–herbicide-resistant wheat planted 1 yr after IMI-wheat treated with imazamox was not injured. Of particular concern for imazamox carryover are low-rainfall areas with low-pH soils. Reduced soil moisture appears to limit imazamox degradation. Imazamox sorption is reduced in low-pH soils, which increases its bioavailability, thereby increasing the potential for injury to rotational crops such as barley, canola, and spring wheat.

Nomenclature: Imazamox; barley, Hordeum vulgare L.; canola, Brassica napa L.; pea, Pisum sativum L.; wheat, Triticum aestivum L.

Additional index words: Barley, canola, carryover, Clearfield™, herbicide-resistant wheat, pea.

Abbreviations: IMI-wheat, imidazolinone-resistant wheat; PNW, Pacific Northwest.

DANIEL A. BALL, JOSEPH P. YENISH, and THEODORE ALBY "Effect of Imazamox Soil Persistence on Dryland Rotational Crops," Weed Technology 17(1), 161-165, (1 January 2003). https://doi.org/10.1614/0890-037X(2003)017[0161:EOISPO]2.0.CO;2
Published: 1 January 2003
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