4.4 Article

Ammonium sulfate improves the efficacy of glyphosate on South African lovegrass (Eragrostis plana) under water stress

Journal

WEED SCIENCE
Volume 69, Issue 2, Pages 167-176

Publisher

CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1017/wsc.2020.97

Keywords

Adjuvant; herbicide absorption; invasive species management; rangelands

Funding

  1. Coordination for the Improvement of Higher Education Personnel (CAPES) [001]
  2. National Council for Scientific and Technological Development (CNPq) [305816/2016-0]
  3. Embrapa Pecuaria Sul
  4. University of Arkansas Agricultural Research Station, Weed Physiology Laboratory, Fayetteville, AR, USA
  5. Federal University of Pelotas (UFPel)

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South African lovegrass is the most important weed in native pastures of southern Brazil, and glyphosate is the main control method. Potassium salt of glyphosate has the fastest effect on South African lovegrass, while younger plants are easier to control. Adding AMS can enhance the effect of glyphosate on drought-stressed lovegrass.
South African lovegrass (Eragrostis plana Nees) is the most important weed of native pastures in southern Brazil. Management options are limited under water-stress conditions, and glyphosate has been the main tool for control. This study compared four salts of glyphosate applied at three growth stages and determined the glyphosate tolerance level. In addition, the performance of ammonium sulfate (AMS) under two soil moisture conditions (50% and 100% of water-holding capacity) and the effect of AMS on absorption and translocation of radiolabeled [C-14]glyphosate were evaluated. The potassium salt of glyphosate had the fastest activity across growth stages of E. plana, which is more vulnerable to glyphosate at the panicle initiation stage. Isopropylamine salt was the slowest-acting glyphosate formulation. Younger plants were typically more easily controlled than older plants at the full tillering stage. The addition of AMS increased the level of control of drought-stressed E. plana compared with glyphosate alone by increasing translocation out of the treated leaf and consequently increasing the concentration of glyphosate in the primary culm. These data can be used to plan an effective management program for E. plana that takes into account the developmental stage of desired pasture grass species.

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