Farms.com Home   News

Critical Time for Weed Removal in Corn and Soybean is Delayed by PRE-Herbicides

By Stevan Knezevic, O. Adewale Osipitan, and Jon Scott
 
Understanding the critical time for weed removal in corn and soybean would not only ensure effective weed removal and minimize unnecessary weed control inputs, but could potentially help minimize the development of herbicide resistance in weeds.
 
Most studies have shown that the critical time for weed removal in corn and soybean started at the early crop stage, as it is well known that early emerging weeds are the most competitive against the crop. This implies that pre-emergence weed control tactics would help control early emerging weeds and possibly delay the need for post-emergence (POST) weed control inputs, including post-application of glyphosate in glyphosate-tolerant (GT) corn and soybean. We therefore conducted a field study in 2017 at Concord to evaluate the influence of pre-emergence (PRE) herbicides on the critical time for weed removal in glyphosate-tolerant (Roundup-Ready) corn and soybean.
 
Corn
 
The three herbicide regimes tested in corn were: 1) No PRE, 2) Pre application of atrazine, and 3) PRE application of Acuron®. Atrazine was used at 2 quarts/acre and was considered a single-active or “basic-blanket treatment.”  Acuron®, which was considered a “loaded treatment” as it contains four active ingredients (atrazine, bicyclopyrone, mesotrione, and s-metolachlor), was applied at 3 quarts/acre. The predominant weed species were common waterhemp, velvetleaf, and green foxtail.
 
Figure 1: Corn yield loss as influenced by three herbicide treatments (No-PRE, Atrazine, and Acuron®)
 
The critical time for weed removal in corn was significantly delayed by the use of PRE-herbicides (Figure 1). For example, without a PRE herbicide, the critical time for weed removal started at the V3 growth stage, but with a PRE application of atrazine, the critical time was delayed to the V5 growth stage. PRE application of Acuron® further delayed the critical time of weed removal to V10 growth stage, which was close to the time of corn canopy closure (Table 1). Weeds that emerge past the time of canopy closer are typically not competitive enough to impact corn yields. Thus, we confirmed that PRE herbicides delayed the need for early weed removal in corn. Furthermore, the use of products with multiple active ingredients and/or multiple modes of action has proven to be effective in further delaying the need for POST weed control programs, and also provided alternative modes of action for fighting glyphosate-resistant weeds in glyphosate-tolerant corn.
 
Table 1: Critical time of weed removal in corn based on 5% yield loss with and without PRE herbicide
TreatmentGDD (SE)1DAE2Corn Stage
No PRE Herbicide144 (4)11V3
Atrazine207 (20)16V5
Acuron®375 (30)33V10
1GDD, growing degree days; SE, standard error in parenthesis
DAE, days after corn emergence
Soybean
 
The three-herbicide regime in soybean tested two PRE herbicides (Authority Assist® [12 oz/acre] and Zidua PRO® [6 oz/acre]) against the no PRE application of herbicide. Authority Assist® contains sulfentrazone and imazethapyr, while Zidua PRO® contains saflufenacil, imazethapyr and pyroxasulfone. Both PRE herbicides were applied immediately after planting soybean. The predominant weed species were common waterhemp, green foxtail, velvetleaf, and common lambsquarters.
 
Figure 2: Soybean yield loss as influenced by three herbicide treatments (No-PRE, Authority Assist® and Zidua PRO®)
 
The critical time for weed removal in soybean was delayed by the PRE herbicides (Figure 2). Without the application of a PRE herbicide, the critical time of weed removal started at 156 growing degree days which corresponded to V1 soybean growth stage (Table 2). Meanwhile, PRE application of either Authority Assist® or Zidua PRO® delayed the critical time of weed removal until 501-504 growing degree days, which corresponded to V6 soybean growth stage (Table 2).
 
Table 2: Critical time of weed removal in soybean based on 5% yield loss with and without PRE herbicide
TreatmentGDD (SE)¹DAE²Soybean Stage
No PRE Herbicide156 (27)13V1
Authority Assist®504 (167)43V6
Zidua PRO®501 (116)42V6
1GDD, growing degree days; SE, standard error in parenthesis
DAE, days after soybean emergence
Practical Implications
 
It is clear that the use of a PRE herbicide protected corn and soybean yield by preventing early season weed emergence and competition. This also delayed the need for weed removal and POST weed control programs. More importantly, our hope is that the use of PRE herbicides with multiple modes of action would aid in managing glyphosate resistant weeds.
 

Trending Video

The Agricultural Revolution

Video: The Agricultural Revolution

Episode 8 - The Agricultural Revolution. A look into the development of farming in the early modern period within its political context, covering the advancement of mechanisation by Jethro Tull and selective breeding by Robert Bakewell, and ultimately the urbanisation of the British population these changes allowed.