Martin Ignes, Te-Ming P. Tseng, Edicarlos de Castro, Amy L. Wilber, James D. McCurdy
Abstract
Annual bluegrass (Poa annua L.) is a problematic weed in turfgrass that has evolved resistance to 12 different herbicide sites of action. The mitotic inhibiting herbicide pronamide has both pre- and postemergence activity on susceptible annual bluegrass populations, but on certain resistant populations, postemergence activity is hypothetically compromised due to lack of root uptake or due to an unknown foliar resistance mechanism. Spray droplet size may affect foliar and soil deposition of pronamide, thus potentially explaining variation in population control or differential shoot and root uptake. Greenhouse experiments were conducted to quantify pronamide, flazasulfuron, and pronamide + flazasulfuron (a common tank mixture) deposition on annual bluegrass as affected by spray-droplet size. Five droplet sizes (200, 400, 600, 800, and 1,000 μm) were sprayed in an enclosed spray chamber on two- to three-leaf stage annual bluegrass plants. Fluorescent dye was added to each treatment solution to quantify the effects of herbicide and spray droplet size on herbicide deposition. Results indicate that spray droplet size affects deposition of pronamide and flazasulfuron, applied alone and in combination, on annual bluegrass. The highest foliar deposition was produced with 400-μm spray droplets in pronamide treatments and with 200 μm spray droplets in flazasulfuron and pronamide + flazasulfuron treatments. The addition of flazasulfuron to pronamide did not affect herbicide deposition when compared with pronamide-alone treatments. Results suggest that 200- to 400-μm spray droplets are optimal for foliar deposition of pronamide. Alternatively, larger droplet sizes may facilitate better soil deposition of pronamide where root uptake is optimal.
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