4.4 Article

A Decade of Glyphosate-Resistant Lolium around the World: Mechanisms, Genes, Fitness, and Agronomic Management

Journal

WEED SCIENCE
Volume 57, Issue 4, Pages 435-441

Publisher

CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1614/WS-08-181.1

Keywords

Glyphosate resistance; herbicide resistance; glyphosate translocation; 5-enolpyruvylshikimate-3-phosphate synthase; EPSPS; target site mutation; Fitness penalty

Funding

  1. Grains Research and Development Corporation

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Glyphosate resistance was First discovered in populations of rigid ryegrass in Australia in 1996. Since then, glyphosate resistance has been detected in additional Populations of rigid ryegrass and Italian ryegrass in several other countries. Glyphosate-resistant rigid ryegrass and Italian ryegrass have been selected in situations where there is all overreliance on glyphosate to the exclusion of other weed control tactics. Two major mechanisms of glyphosate resistance have been discovered in these two species: a change in the pattern of glyphosate translocation Such that glyphosate accumulates in the leaf tips of resistant plants instead of in the shoot meristem; and amino acid Substitutions at Pro 106 within the target site, 5-enolpyruvyishikimate-3-phosphate synthase (EPSPS). There are also populations with both mechanisms. In the case of glyphosate resistance, the target site Mutations tend to provide a lower level of resistance than does the altered translocation mechanism. Each of these resistance mechanisms is inherited as a single gene trait that is largely dominant. As these ryegrass species are obligate outcrossers, this ensures resistance alleles call move in both pollen and seed. Some glyphosate-resistant rigid ryegrass Populations appear to have a significant fitness penalty associated with the resistance allele. Field Surveys show that strategies vary in their ability to reduce the frequency of glyphosate resistance in populations and weed Population size, with integrated strategies-including alternative weed management and controlling seed set of surviving plants-the most effective.

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