Open Access
How to translate text using browser tools
22 January 2021 Effect of single or sequential POST herbicide applications on seed production and viability of glyphosate-resistant Palmer amaranth (Amaranthus palmeri) in dicamba- and glyphosate-resistant soybean
Jose H. S. de Sanctis, Stevan Z. Knezevic, Vipan Kumar, Amit J. Jhala
Author Affiliations +
Abstract

Glyphosate-resistant (GR) Palmer amaranth is a troublesome weed that can emerge throughout the soybean growing season in Nebraska and several other regions of the United States. Late-emerging Palmer amaranth plants can produce seeds, thus replenishing the soil seedbank. The objectives of this study were to evaluate single or sequential applications of labeled POST herbicides such as acifluorfen, dicamba, a fomesafen and fluthiacet-methyl premix, glyphosate, and lactofen on GR Palmer amaranth control, density, biomass, seed production, and seed viability, as well as grain yield of dicamba- and glyphosate-resistant (DGR) soybean. Field experiments were conducted in a grower's field infested with GR Palmer amaranth near Carleton, NE, in 2018 and 2019, with no PRE herbicide applied. Acifluorfen, dicamba, a premix of fomesafen and fluthiacet-methyl, glyphosate, or lactofen were applied POST in single or sequential applications between the V4 and R6 soybean growth stages, with timings based on product labels. Dicamba applied at V4 or in sequential applications at V4 followed by R1 or R3 controlled GR Palmer amaranth 91% to 100% at soybean harvest, reduced Palmer amaranth density to as low as 2 or fewer plants m–2, reduced seed production to 557 to 2,911 seeds per female plant, and resulted in the highest soybean yield during both years of the study. Sequential applications of acifluorfen, fomesafen and fluthiacet premix, or lactofen were not as effective as dicamba for GR Palmer amaranth control; however, they reduced seed production similar to dicamba. On the basis of the results of this study, we conclude that dicamba was effective for controlling GR Palmer amaranth and reduced density, biomass, and seed production without DGR soybean injury. Herbicides evaluated in this study had no effect on Palmer amaranth seed viability.

Nomenclature: Acifluorfen; dicamba; fluthiacet-methyl; fomesafen; glyphosate; lactofen; Palmer amaranth; Amaranthus palmeri S. Watson; soybean; Glycine max (L.) Merr.

© The Author(s), 2021. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of the Weed Science Society of America.
Jose H. S. de Sanctis, Stevan Z. Knezevic, Vipan Kumar, and Amit J. Jhala "Effect of single or sequential POST herbicide applications on seed production and viability of glyphosate-resistant Palmer amaranth (Amaranthus palmeri) in dicamba- and glyphosate-resistant soybean," Weed Technology 35(3), 449-456, (22 January 2021). https://doi.org/10.1017/wet.2021.7
Received: 29 October 2020; Accepted: 12 January 2021; Published: 22 January 2021
KEYWORDS
Biomass reduction
fecundity
growth stage
inflorescence
POST herbicide
Back to Top