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Spatial variability of atrazine and alachlor efficacy and mineralization in an eastern South Dakota field

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 January 2017

Zhuojing Liu
Affiliation:
Plant Science Department, South Dakota State University, Brookings, SD 57007
David E. Clay
Affiliation:
Plant Science Department, South Dakota State University, Brookings, SD 57007

Abstract

Landscape-induced differences in soil variability and other parameters have potential effects on herbicide sorption, persistence, degradation, and, ultimately, efficacy. This study examined the spatial variability of herbicide efficacy across an eastern South Dakota field in continuous corn. Atrazine and alachlor had been applied for the previous 10 yr. The spatial variability observed in weed control was compared with herbicide sorption (Kd), mineralization rate, and first-order half-life (t1/2), and field herbicide dissipation rates (DT50). Spatial structure was present in atrazine mineralization, weed biomass, and corn biomass data. The amount of atrazine and alachlor sorbed to soil collected from the summit position of the field was 10 and 20% less, respectively, than the amounts sorbed to backslope or toeslope soils. Generally, both herbicides had faster mineralization rates and shorter t1/2 in summit than in backslope or toeslope soils. Weed biomass was correlated positively with elevation and total amount of atrazine mineralized, whereas corn biomass was correlated negatively with these parameters. These findings suggest that weed control can be improved by accounting for the landscape positional effects on differential herbicide mineralization and dissipation in fields.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Weed Science Society of America 

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