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26 January 2021 Effect of cover-crop biomass, strip-tillage residue disturbance width, and PRE herbicide placement on cotton weed control, yield, and economics
Andrew J. Price, Robert L. Nichols, Trent A. Morton, Kipling S. Balkcom, Timothy L. Grey, Steve Li
Author Affiliations +
Abstract

Conservation tillage adoption continues to be threatened by glyphosate and acetolactate synthase–resistant Palmer amaranth and other troublesome weeds. Field experiments were conducted from autumn 2010 through crop harvest in 2013 at two locations in Alabama to evaluate the effect of integrated management practices on weed control and seed cotton yield in glyphosate-resistant cotton. The effects of a cereal rye cover crop using high- or low-biomass residue, followed by wide or narrow within-row strip tillage and three PRE herbicide regimens were evaluated. The three PRE regimens were (1) pendimethalin at 0.84 kg ae ha-1 plus fomesafen at 0.28 kg ai ha-1 applied broadcast, (2) pendimethalin plus fomesafen applied banded on the row, or (3) no PRE. Each PRE treatment was followed by (fb) glyphosate (1.12 kg ae ha-1) applied POST fb layby applications of diuron (1.12 kg ai ha-1) plus monosodium methanearsonate (2.24 kg ai ha-1). Low-residue plots ranged in biomass from 85 to 464 kg ha-1, and high-biomass residue plots ranged from 3,119 to 6,929 kg ha-1. In most comparisons, surface disturbance width, residue amount, and soil-applied herbicide placement did not influence within-row weed control; however, broadcast PRE resulted in increased carpetweed, large crabgrass, Palmer amaranth, tall morning-glory, and yellow nutsedge weed control in row middles compared with plots receiving banded PRE. In addition, high-residue plots had increased carpetweed, common purslane, large crabgrass, Palmer amaranth, sicklepod, and tall morning-glory weed control between rows. Use of banded PRE herbicides resulted in equivalent yield and revenue in four of six comparisons compared with those with broadcast PRE herbicide application; however, this would likely result in many between-row weed escapes. Thus, conservation tillage cotton would benefit from broadcast soil-applied herbicide applications regardless of residue amount and tillage width when infested with Palmer amaranth and other troublesome weed species.

Nomenclature: Diuron; fomesafen; glyphosate; monosodium methanearsonate; pendimethalin; carpetweed; Mollugo verticillata L. MOVE; common purslane; Portulaca oleracea L. POOL; large crabgrass; Digitaria sanguinalis (L.) Scop. DISA; Palmer amaranth; Amaranthus palmeri S. Watson AMPA; sicklepod; Senna obtusifolia (L.) Irwin & Barneby SEOB4; tall morning-glory Ipomoea purpurea (L.) Roth IPPU2; yellow nutsedge; Cyperus esculentus L. CYES; cereal rye; Secale cereal L.; cotton; Gossypium hirsutum L.

© USDA-ARS National Soil Dynamics Laboratory, 2021. This is a work of the US Government and is not subject to copyright protection within the United States. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of Weed Science Society of America.
Andrew J. Price, Robert L. Nichols, Trent A. Morton, Kipling S. Balkcom, Timothy L. Grey, and Steve Li "Effect of cover-crop biomass, strip-tillage residue disturbance width, and PRE herbicide placement on cotton weed control, yield, and economics," Weed Technology 35(3), 385-393, (26 January 2021). https://doi.org/10.1017/wet.2021.8
Received: 10 September 2020; Accepted: 15 January 2021; Published: 26 January 2021
KEYWORDS
conservation tillage
integrated weed management
Palmer amaranth
resistance management
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