Chemical weed control in peanut crops at Katherine, N.T

1968 ◽  
Vol 8 (35) ◽  
pp. 762
Author(s):  
IMW Wood

In crops of Spanish peanuts at Katherine, N.T., trifluralin at 1 lb active ingredient an acre and benefin at 2 lb a.i. an acre gave almost complete control of the two pigweeds Trianthema portulacastrum and Portulaca oleracea. During two seasons, one a dry short season and the other a season of average rainfall and duration, both herbicides were very effective and did not cause any crop damage. Prometryne at 3 lb a.i. an acre and linuron at 2 lb a.i. an acre gave good control in the dry season but only fair control in the wetter season. Chloramben at 4 lb a.i. an acre gave excellent weed control with little crop damage in the normal season, but poor weed control and considerable crop damage in the dry season.


1975 ◽  
Vol 85 (3) ◽  
pp. 533-539 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Penny ◽  
J. F. Jenkyn

SUMMARYExperiments with winter wheat in 1972 and 1973 tested all combinations of ‘Nitro-Chalk’ ν. liquid N-fertilizer, 56 ν. 112 kg N/ha, 0 ν 5·6 1/ha of herbicide (2·8 kg acid equivalent/ha) and 0 ν 0·7 1/ha of mildew fungicide, all applied at growth stage 4–5 of the Feekes scale. The liquid fertilizer (26 % N) was a solution of ammonium nitrate and urea, the herbicide was a mixture of dichlorprop and MCPA and the mildew fungicide contained 75 % (w/v) of the active ingredient tridemorph.The herbicide and mildew fungicide were sprayed either alone or together and neither scorched the wheat leaves. Liquid N-fertilizer by itself slightly scorched the wheat leaves and scorch was increased by adding herbicide to it, but more by adding the fungicide and most by adding both; it was then severe, especially with 112 kg N/ha.Weed control after adding herbicide to the liquid fertilizer was at least as good as from herbicide sprayed alone.In July, foliar diseases were much more severe with 112 than with 56 kg N/ha, but effects of the other treatments, including fungicide, on foliar diseases, were then very small.With 56 kg N/ha, yields were slightly larger with ‘Nitro-Chalk’ alone than with the liquid N-fertilizer alone, but with 112 kg N/ha they were slightly larger with the liquid fertilizer; adding herbicide to the liquid fertilizer did not change these results. With either amount of N, adding mildew fungicide to the liquid fertilizer made it less good than ‘Nitro-Chalk’, presumably because of the damage from leaf scorch; adding both herbicide and fungicide to the liquid fertilizer increased the damage.



1964 ◽  
Vol 4 (15) ◽  
pp. 321
Author(s):  
Rijn PJ van

Between 1960 and 1963, four preliminary experiments on herbicides for cotton were carried out at Kimberley Research Station. Diuron, applied pre-emergence at rates of 1/2-1 lb an acre active ingredient (a. i.), and dicryl, applied seven to ten days after emergence at rates of 3-6 lb an acre a. i., gave satisfactory weed control. Diuron, because of its longer residual action (six weeks in early wet season, two months or more in late wet and early dry season) is preferred, and is recommended as the standard herbicidal treatment for Ord River cotton crops.



1964 ◽  
Vol 4 (15) ◽  
pp. 316 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rijn PJ van

Three herbicides, CIPC (Isopropyl-N-(3-chloropheny1)-carbamate) EPTC (Ethyl-NN-dipropylthiol- carbamate) and Stam F-34 (3,4-Dichloropropionanilide), were tested for the control of barnyard grasses, Echinochloa colonum (L.) Link and Echinochloa crus-galli (L.) Beauv., in rice at Kimberley Research Station. The herbicides were tested at different rates and times of application on land lightly and heavily infested with weeds in crops of dry season rice, japonica variety Caloro, and wet season rice indica variety Meli No. 2 or Sircna. CIPC gave good control of weeds but did not increase crop yield ; furthermore, it was unreliable in its action and in one experiment reduced crop yield. EPTC, at 1 lb an acre active ingredient applied pre-sowing, gave good control of weeds but no increases in crop yield. Stam F-34, at 3-6 lb an acre active ingredient applied two to three weeks after crop emergence, gave good control of weeds in both wet and dry season rice and, as a result, crop yields increased.



1964 ◽  
Vol 55 (1) ◽  
pp. 139-146 ◽  
Author(s):  
F. Ashman

Bagged maize stored in large stacks on the Kenya coast is subject to reinvasion by stored-products pests following successful fumigation with methylbromide, and treatment of the stack surfaces with insecticidal sprays has been unsatisfactory in preventing reinfestation.Further tests are described of different methods of applying insecticides to small experimental stacks, each composed of ten 200-lb. bags of maize, exposed within a warehouse, after fumigation, to reinfestation from a large bulk of maize heavily infested with Tribolium castaneum (Hbst.). Populations of adults and pre-adult stages of T. castaneum were recorded from samples of grain obtained by a sampling spear from each bag at intervals.In the first of two experiments, single applications of malathion in a spray at 100 and 150 mg. per sq. ft. to the entire external surface of each bag during the construction of the stack did not give good control of reinfestation in the six months after fumigation, but were not significantly worse, respectively, than a dust containing 1 per cent. lindane similarly applied to the upper surface of each bag and, four weeks later, to the outside of the stack at the rates of 3 and 6 oz. per bag. When the malathion treatments were followed by 24, 12 or 8 applications, at intervals of 1, 2 or 3 weeks, respectively, of sprays containing malathion to give 100 and 150 mg. per sq. ft. over the whole external surface of the stack, good control of T. castaneum was obtained with all treatments.Mean residues of malathion in the outer inch of maize in the bags six months after the start of the experiment varied from 3 to about 19 p.p.m., according to treatment, suggesting that little penetrated through the bag wall and that after thorough mixing of the grain before use the malathion content would not exceed the permissible limit.In the second experiment, an admixture of malathion dust with the maize before bagging to give 8 p.p.m. active ingredient gave almost complete control of larvae and pupae, and application of 3 oz. 0·5 per cent, malathion dust, or a spray affording 400 mg. malathion per sq. ft., to the upper surface of each bag during stacking gave highly significant reductions in numbers of T. castaneum in the pre-adult stages. The last of these treatments, followed, after fumigation, by malathion applied in a spray at 150 mg. per sq. ft. every three weeks to the external surfaces of the stack, is recommended for large-scale trial.



1969 ◽  
Vol 64 (1) ◽  
pp. 29-32
Author(s):  
Luis Almodóvar ◽  
Adalberto Vélez-Báez

Herbicides Metribuzin [4-amino-6-tert-butyl-3-(methylthio )-as-triazin-5-(4H)one] at 0.8 and 1.6 kg/ha active ingredient, Prometryn [2,4-bis (isopropylamino)- 6-(methylthio)-s-triazine] at 3.3 and 6.6 kg, and Chloramben [3- amino-2,5-dichlorobenzoic acid] at 3.3 and 6.6 kg/ ha were evaluated for preemergence weed control on pigeon peas during 1976 at Lajas, Puerto Rico, in a Vertisol soil. The yield with Metribuzin at 0.8 kg/ha a.i. was similar (P=0.01) to that of the hand-weeded treatment. No statistical differences in yields were observed among the hand-weeded plots, Metribuzin 1.6 kg/ha a.i., and the two Prometryn rates. The least effective herbicide was Chloramben at 3.3 kg/ha, which at the rate of 6.6 kg was toxic to the crop. Good preemergence weed control was obtained from the other herbicide treatments with no toxicity to the legume. The higher herbicide rate of each compound controlled the weeds better than the lower rate. Metribuzin and Prometryn are in the process of evaluation for registration according to the Environmental Protection Agency regulations.



2006 ◽  
Vol 20 (2) ◽  
pp. 494-501 ◽  
Author(s):  
John T. O'Donovan ◽  
K. Neil Harker ◽  
George W. Clayton ◽  
Robert E. Blackshaw

Herbicide-resistant cultivars account for over 90% of the canola grown in western Canada and cultivars resistant to glyphosate dominate the market. Field experiments were conducted at three locations in Alberta to compare the glyphosate system with more traditional herbicide regimes. Glyphosate applied before seeding in spring resulted in better weed control, lower dockage, and higher canola yield and net return than 2,4-D applied in the fall. Glyphosate applied once (two- to four-leaf canola) or twice (two- to four-leaf followed by five- to six-leaf canola) in-crop provided similar weed control, dockage, and canola yield as ethalfluralin applied PRE in the fall followed by an in-crop mixture of sethoxydim, ethametsulfuron, and clopyralid; and superior weed control and canola yield and lower dockage than ethalfluralin alone or an in-crop mixture of sethoxydim and ethametsulfuron. The in-crop glyphosate applications resulted in higher net revenues than the other treatments. There was little or no advantage to applying glyphosate twice compared with once in-crop. The amount of active ingredient entering the environment varied with the herbicide regime but was lower with the glyphosate system than with most of the traditional regimes, especially when glyphosate was applied only once in-crop.



Weed Science ◽  
1987 ◽  
Vol 35 (3) ◽  
pp. 412-417 ◽  
Author(s):  
Douglas D. Buhler

Weed control in reduced-tillage corn (Zea maysL. ‘Pioneer 3732′) with butylate [S-ethyl bis(2-methylpropyl) carbamothioate] and EPTC (S-ethyl dipropyl carbarnothioate) was not reduced when these herbicides were applied jointly with dry or liquid fertilizer. In most cases, application with fertilizer resulted in weed control similar to that observed when the herbicide was applied in water at 285 L/ha. Butylate applied as a granular formulation also gave weed control similar to the spray at 285 L/ha. Application in 95 L/ha of water consistently resulted in reduced weed control. Corn injury was not greatly influenced by application method, and differences in corn yield appeared to be due to differences in weed control. Growth chamber bioassays indicated that both butylate and EPTC dissipated more rapidly when applied in 95 L/ha of water than the other application methods, which may explain differences in weed control observed in the field.



1996 ◽  
Vol 36 (4) ◽  
pp. 443 ◽  
Author(s):  
MG Mason ◽  
RW Madin

Field trials at Beverley (19911, Salmon Gums (1991; 2 sites) and Merredin (1992; 2 sites), each with 5 rates of nitrogen (N) and 3 levels of weed control, were used to investigate the effect of weeds and N on wheat grain yield and protein concentration during 1991 and 1992. Weeds in the study were grasses (G) and broadleaf (BL). Weeds reduced both vegetative dry matter yield and grain yield of wheat at all sites except for dry matter at Merredin (BL). Nitrogen fertiliser increased wheat dry matter yield at all sites. Nitrogen increased wheat grain yield at Beverley and Merredin (BL), but decreased yield at both Salmon Gums sites in 1991. Nitrogen fertiliser increased grain protein concentration at all 5 sites-at all rates for 3 sites [Salmon Gums (G) and (BL) and Merredin (G)] and at rates of 69 kg N/ha or more at the other 2 sites [Beverley and Merredin (BL)]. However, the effect of weeds on grain protein varied across sites. At Merredin (G) protein concentration was higher where there was no weed control, possibly due to competition for soil moisture by the greater weed burden. At Salmon Gums (G), grain protein concentration was greater when weeds were controlled than in the presence of weeds, probably due to competition for N between crop and weeds. In the other 3 trials, there was no effect of weeds on grain protein. The effect of weeds on grain protein appears complex and depends on competition between crop and weeds for N and for water at the end of the season, and the interaction between the two.



1994 ◽  
Vol 8 (3) ◽  
pp. 536-540 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert G. Wilson

A three-year experiment was conducted near Scottsbluff, NE, to evaluate the selectivity of POST-applied imazethapyr for weed control in alfalfa, birdsfoot trefoil, cicer milkvetch, red clover, sainfoin, and yellow sweetclover. Imazethapyr injured all legumes 15 DAT. Imazethapyr also reduced the height of birdsfoot trefoil, cicer milkvetch, red clover, and yellow sweeclover 28 DAT. Legume first cutting yields were not reduced by imazethapyr and with alfalfa, birdsfoot trefoil, cicer milkvetch, and sainfoin, first cutting yields were increased by imazethapyr. Imazethapyr reduced weed biomass in all legume seedings. Weed biomass in new seedings of alfalfa was reduced more than that of the other legumes.



2015 ◽  
Vol 87 (3) ◽  
pp. 1691-1699 ◽  
Author(s):  
MARCELO C. SOUZA ◽  
AUGUSTO C. FRANCO ◽  
MUNDAYATAN HARIDASAN ◽  
DAVI R. ROSSATTO ◽  
JANAÍNA F. DE ARAÚJO ◽  
...  

Despite limitations of low fertility and high acidity of the soils, the cerrado flora is the richest amongst savannas. Many cerrado woody species show sclerophyllous leaves, which might be related to the availability of water and nutrients in the soil. To better understand the function and structure of cerrado vegetation within its own variations, we compared two cerrado communities: one in its core region in central Brazil (Brasília, DF) and the other on its southern periphery (Itirapina, SP). We contrasted the length of the dry season, soil fertility rates, leaf concentrations of N, P, K, Ca and Mg and the specific leaf area (SLA) between these communities. The dry season was shorter on the periphery, where the soil was more fertile although more acidic. Plants from the periphery showed higher SLA and higher leaf concentrations of N, P, Ca and Mg. We propose that the higher SLA of plants from the periphery is related to the shorter dry season, which allows better conditions for nutrient uptake.



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