Efficacy and selectivity of pre-em herbicide on dependence of soil types and precipitation in sunflower crop

During the growing seasons in 2018 and 2019, two field trials were conducted to estimate how precipitation affects the efficacy of PRE-em herbicides in sunflower crop grown on different soil types. Both regions were naturally infested with a high population of Polygonum aviculare L., Solanum nigrum L...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Zvonko Pacanoski, Arben Mehmeti
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Estonian Academic Agricultural Society 2021-06-01
Series:Agraarteadus
Subjects:
Online Access: http://agrt.emu.ee/pdf/2021_1_pacanoski.pdf
id doaj-9447d1e412e84ddb880076bb0ff7653e
record_format Article
spelling doaj-9447d1e412e84ddb880076bb0ff7653e2021-06-29T14:35:13ZengEstonian Academic Agricultural SocietyAgraarteadus1024-08452228-48932021-06-0132110011010.15159/jas.21.08Efficacy and selectivity of pre-em herbicide on dependence of soil types and precipitation in sunflower cropZvonko Pacanoski0Arben Mehmeti1 Faculty for Agricultural Sciences and Food, Ss. Cyril and Methodius University, Skopje, R. N. Macedonia University of Prishtina, Department of Plant Protection, Prishtina, Republic of Kosovo. arben.mehmeti@uni-pr.edu During the growing seasons in 2018 and 2019, two field trials were conducted to estimate how precipitation affects the efficacy of PRE-em herbicides in sunflower crop grown on different soil types. Both regions were naturally infested with a high population of Polygonum aviculare L., Solanum nigrum L., Chenopodium album L., Amaranthus retroflexus L., Portulaca olearacea L. and Echinochloa crus-galli (L.) P. Beauv. Efficacy of PRE-em herbicides varied among weed species, treatments, periods of efficacy estimation, regions and years, respectively. Overall performances of the PRE-em herbicides were correlated with the weather and soil properties. Humid April in Bitola region in 2018, particularly the first week after application (34 mm) before weed emergence caused herbicide leaching from the soil surface, which probably was the most likely reason for the lower efficacy of PRE-em herbicides in 2018, compared to their application in 2019. In 2018 precipitation above 30 years average were recorded in the Titov Veles region as well, but due to their equal occurrence particularly during the first and second week after application, as well as soil type properties (higher content of clay and organic matter) leaching did not occur and efficacy was good to excellent. Contrary, the limited precipitation after PRE-em application (five, nine, and eight mm during the first week before application, first and second week after application) may have contributed to the poor performance of PRE-em herbicides in the Titov Veles region in 2019 compared with 2018. Heavy precipitation directly following PRE-em application caused sunflower injury in the Bitola region in 2018, which ranged from 9–28% across PRE-em treatments seven days after application. Injures of oxyfluorfen and dimethenamid were more serious (24 and 28%, respectively). Sunflower yields for each treatment in both region s generally reflected overall weed control and crop injury. http://agrt.emu.ee/pdf/2021_1_pacanoski.pdf weedsherbicidessunflowerefficacyselectivitysoilprecipitation
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Zvonko Pacanoski
Arben Mehmeti
spellingShingle Zvonko Pacanoski
Arben Mehmeti
Efficacy and selectivity of pre-em herbicide on dependence of soil types and precipitation in sunflower crop
Agraarteadus
weeds
herbicides
sunflower
efficacy
selectivity
soil
precipitation
author_facet Zvonko Pacanoski
Arben Mehmeti
author_sort Zvonko Pacanoski
title Efficacy and selectivity of pre-em herbicide on dependence of soil types and precipitation in sunflower crop
title_short Efficacy and selectivity of pre-em herbicide on dependence of soil types and precipitation in sunflower crop
title_full Efficacy and selectivity of pre-em herbicide on dependence of soil types and precipitation in sunflower crop
title_fullStr Efficacy and selectivity of pre-em herbicide on dependence of soil types and precipitation in sunflower crop
title_full_unstemmed Efficacy and selectivity of pre-em herbicide on dependence of soil types and precipitation in sunflower crop
title_sort efficacy and selectivity of pre-em herbicide on dependence of soil types and precipitation in sunflower crop
publisher Estonian Academic Agricultural Society
series Agraarteadus
issn 1024-0845
2228-4893
publishDate 2021-06-01
description During the growing seasons in 2018 and 2019, two field trials were conducted to estimate how precipitation affects the efficacy of PRE-em herbicides in sunflower crop grown on different soil types. Both regions were naturally infested with a high population of Polygonum aviculare L., Solanum nigrum L., Chenopodium album L., Amaranthus retroflexus L., Portulaca olearacea L. and Echinochloa crus-galli (L.) P. Beauv. Efficacy of PRE-em herbicides varied among weed species, treatments, periods of efficacy estimation, regions and years, respectively. Overall performances of the PRE-em herbicides were correlated with the weather and soil properties. Humid April in Bitola region in 2018, particularly the first week after application (34 mm) before weed emergence caused herbicide leaching from the soil surface, which probably was the most likely reason for the lower efficacy of PRE-em herbicides in 2018, compared to their application in 2019. In 2018 precipitation above 30 years average were recorded in the Titov Veles region as well, but due to their equal occurrence particularly during the first and second week after application, as well as soil type properties (higher content of clay and organic matter) leaching did not occur and efficacy was good to excellent. Contrary, the limited precipitation after PRE-em application (five, nine, and eight mm during the first week before application, first and second week after application) may have contributed to the poor performance of PRE-em herbicides in the Titov Veles region in 2019 compared with 2018. Heavy precipitation directly following PRE-em application caused sunflower injury in the Bitola region in 2018, which ranged from 9–28% across PRE-em treatments seven days after application. Injures of oxyfluorfen and dimethenamid were more serious (24 and 28%, respectively). Sunflower yields for each treatment in both region s generally reflected overall weed control and crop injury.
topic weeds
herbicides
sunflower
efficacy
selectivity
soil
precipitation
url http://agrt.emu.ee/pdf/2021_1_pacanoski.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT zvonkopacanoski efficacyandselectivityofpreemherbicideondependenceofsoiltypesandprecipitationinsunflowercrop
AT arbenmehmeti efficacyandselectivityofpreemherbicideondependenceofsoiltypesandprecipitationinsunflowercrop
_version_ 1721354739165167616