| |
Publication Type:
| Report |
Author(s): | Harker, K. Neil;
Dekker, Jack H. |
Author Affiliation: | Harker: Research Assistant; Dekker: Assistant Professor, Department of Crop Science, University of Guelph, Guelph, Ontario |
Title: | Temperature effects on graminicide translocation in quackgrass |
Section: | Physiology, edaphic factors and control of specific weeds Other records with the "Physiology, edaphic factors and control of specific weeds" Section
|
Meeting Info.: | Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada: December 4-6, 1984 |
Source: | Proceedings: North CentralWeed Control Conference. Vol. 39, 1984, p. 94. |
Publishing Information: | [Urbana, Illinois: Department of Agronomy, University of Illinois] |
# of Pages: | 1 |
Keywords: | TIC Keywords: Temperatures; Graminicide; Translocation; Elymus repens; Glyphosate; Sethoxydim; Fluazifop; Haloxyfop; Clopropoxydim; Quizalofop; Liquid scintillation counting
|
Abstract/Contents: | "The effect of temperature on graminicide translocation in quackgrass was evaluated under controlled environmental conditions. Uniformly labelled 14C-sucrose (α -glucopyranosyl-B-D-fructofuranoside) and the radiolabelled herbicides, glyphosate, sethoxydim, fluazifop, haloxyfop (Dowco 453), clopropoxydim (RE 36290) and DPX-Y-6202 were applied to four- to five-leaf quackgrass plants adapted to three day/night temperature regimes (10/5 C, 20/15 C and 30/25C). One week after treatment the plants were harvested, lyophilized, and later sectioned, mapped, and combusted for 14C-quantification by liquid scintillation counting. Rhizome node growth was greatest at 20/15 C. Glyphosate, fluazifop and haloxyfop were most inhibitory to node growth, while sethoxydim and DPX-Y6202 were intermediate, and clopropoxydim was least inhibitory. Sucrose and glyphosate translocated more than all of the graminicides at the highest and lowest temperatures. At 20/15 C, sethoxydim and fluazifop were translocated as much as sucrose and glyphosate. A change in temperature did not affect the amount of translocation of sucrose, clopropoxydim, and DPX-Y6202. At all temperatures, only relatively small amounts of clopropoxydim and DPX-Y6202 were translocated. As temperature increased from 10/5 C to 20/15 C the translocation of sethoxydim, fluazifop and haloxyfop increased. The translocation of glyphosate increaesed as the temperature increased from 20/15 C to 30/25 C. Increasing temperature also resulted in a shift in the distribution of 14C within the plant, with a higher proportion of the translocated compounds going to the shoots than the rhizomes. Sethoxydim partitioned into the shoots more than the rhizomes as temperature increased from 10/5 C to 20/15 C. However, glyphosate, fluazifop, and halozyfop translocated more to the shoots than the rhizomes only as temperatures were increased from 20/15 C to 30/25 C. These results suggest that at temperatures when graminicides are usually applied to quackgrass (i.e. usually less than 30/25 C), sethoxydim distribution between shoots and rhizomes leads to less rhizome kill than fluazifop and haloxyfop." |
Language: | English |
References: | 0 |
Note: | This item is an abstract only! |
| ASA/CSSA/SSSA Citation (Crop Science-Like - may be incomplete): Harker, K. N., and J. H. Dekker. 1984. Temperature effects on graminicide translocation in quackgrass. Res. Rep. North Cent. Weed Control Conf. 39:p. 94. |
| Fastlink to access this record outside TGIF: https://tic.msu.edu/tgif/flink?recno=12500 |
| If there are problems with this record, send us feedback about record 12500. |
| Choices for finding the above item: |
| MSU catalog number: SB 610 .N6 |
| Request through your local library's inter-library loan service (bring or send a copy of this TGIF record) |