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14 February 2025 Low carryover risk of late-season soybean herbicides to newly planted sugarcane
Matthew R. Foster, Albert J. Orgeron, Prashant Jha, Douglas J. Spaunhorst, Alice A. Wright
Author Affiliations +
Abstract

Numerous annual and perennial weeds infest sugarcane. End-season weed infestations are managed before sugarcane is replanted by fallowing (cultivation and sequential glyphosate applications) or by rotating to glyphosate-tolerant soybean in Louisiana. With the occurrence of perennial grasses and glyphosate-resistant weeds, growers need to utilize alternative late POST (LPOST) herbicide programs in soybean to reduce weed infestations in newly planted sugarcane (soybean-sugarcane rotation). Current rotational restrictions limit the use of acifluorfen, clethodim, fomesafen, and quizalofop to control troublesome weeds before soybean harvest and the subsequent planting of sugarcane. However, there is a lack of information on the carryover effects of these soybean herbicides on newly planted sugarcane. Field experiments were conducted at Schriever, LA, and St. Gabriel, LA, in 2017 to 2018 and in 2020 to 2021 to determine sugarcane injury and yield component response to herbicides labeled for LPOST applications in soybean, including acifluorfen, clethodim, fomesafen, lactofen, and quizalofop, applied at the field-use rates (1X) 45 d prior to or immediately after sugarcane planting. Separate field experiments were conducted at those two locations in Louisiana in 2018 to 2019 and in 2020 to 2021 to determine sugarcane injury and yield component response to five rates of fomesafen applied immediately after sugarcane planting. Results of the herbicide screening experiment showed no reductions in sugarcane shoot and stalk population, stalk height, sugarcane yield, sucrose content, or sucrose yield from the selected herbicides at either application timing. Fomesafen applied at 790 (2X) and 1,580 (4X) g ha–1 resulted in 7% and 13% average visible injury to sugarcane at 27 d after treatment (DAT), respectively; injury symptoms persisted until 62 DAT. Transient injury observed at 62 DAT did not correspond to reduced sugarcane stalk population, height, sucrose content, sugarcane yield, or sucrose yield. This research indicates a potentially low risk of carryover and yield loss in newly planted sugarcane from late-season applications of selected soybean herbicides.

Nomenclature: Acifluorfen; clethodim; fomesafen; lactofen; quizalofop; soybean, Glycine max (L.) Merr; sugarcane, Saccharum spp. interspecific hybrids

Matthew R. Foster, Albert J. Orgeron, Prashant Jha, Douglas J. Spaunhorst, and Alice A. Wright "Low carryover risk of late-season soybean herbicides to newly planted sugarcane," Weed Technology 39(1), 1-6, (14 February 2025). https://doi.org/10.1017/wet.2024.101
Received: 16 August 2024; Accepted: 6 December 2024; Published: 14 February 2025
KEYWORDS
ACCase inhibitor
Crop injury
crop tolerance
herbicide timing
PPO inhibitor
preplant herbicides
rotational crop restriction period
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