Rice (Oryza sativa L.) response to clomazone as influenced by rate, soil type, and planting date

Clomazone is an effective herbicide widely used for preemergence grass control in rice. However, use of clomazone on sandy textured soils of the western Texas rice belt may cause serious rice injury. When labeled for rice in 2001, sandy textured soils were excluded. Laboratory experiments were condu...

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Main Author: O'Barr, John Houston
Other Authors: Chandler, James M.
Format: Others
Language:en_US
Published: Texas A&M University 2006
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/3725
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spelling ndltd-tamu.edu-oai-repository.tamu.edu-1969.1-37252013-01-08T10:38:10ZRice (Oryza sativa L.) response to clomazone as influenced by rate, soil type, and planting dateO'Barr, John Houstoninjurysoil textureClomazone is an effective herbicide widely used for preemergence grass control in rice. However, use of clomazone on sandy textured soils of the western Texas rice belt may cause serious rice injury. When labeled for rice in 2001, sandy textured soils were excluded. Laboratory experiments were conducted to determine the effect of soil characteristics and water potential on plant-available clomazone and rice injury. A centrifugal double-tube technique was used to determine plant-available concentration in soil solution (ACSS), total amount available in soil solution (TASS), and Kd values for clomazone on four soils at four water potentials. A rice bioassay was conducted parallel to the plant-available study to correlate biological availability to ACSS, TASS, and Kd. TASS was significantly different in all soils at the 1% level of significance. The order of increasing TASS for the soils studied was Morey Edna Nada Crowley which correlated well with soil characteristics. Two field experiments at three locations were conducted in 2002 and 2003 to determine the optimum rate range that maximizes weed control and minimizes crop injury across a wide variety of soil textures and planting dates. At Beaumont, Eagle Lake, and Ganado, TX, preemergence application of 0.41 to 0.56, 0.38 to 0.43, and 0.36 to 0.42 kg ha-1 clomazone, respectively, provided optimum weed control with minimal rice injury. Data suggests that clomazone is safe to use on rice on sandy textured soils. Injury may occur, but, rates suggested from this research will minimize injury and achieve excellent weed control. As a result, amendments to the herbicide label will allow clomazone use on sandy textured soils giving rice producers more flexibility and access to another effective herbicide.Texas A&M UniversityChandler, James M.2006-08-16T19:00:28Z2006-08-16T19:00:28Z2005-052006-08-16T19:00:28ZBookThesisElectronic Dissertationtext12974878 byteselectronicapplication/pdfborn digitalhttp://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/3725en_US
collection NDLTD
language en_US
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic injury
soil texture
spellingShingle injury
soil texture
O'Barr, John Houston
Rice (Oryza sativa L.) response to clomazone as influenced by rate, soil type, and planting date
description Clomazone is an effective herbicide widely used for preemergence grass control in rice. However, use of clomazone on sandy textured soils of the western Texas rice belt may cause serious rice injury. When labeled for rice in 2001, sandy textured soils were excluded. Laboratory experiments were conducted to determine the effect of soil characteristics and water potential on plant-available clomazone and rice injury. A centrifugal double-tube technique was used to determine plant-available concentration in soil solution (ACSS), total amount available in soil solution (TASS), and Kd values for clomazone on four soils at four water potentials. A rice bioassay was conducted parallel to the plant-available study to correlate biological availability to ACSS, TASS, and Kd. TASS was significantly different in all soils at the 1% level of significance. The order of increasing TASS for the soils studied was Morey Edna Nada Crowley which correlated well with soil characteristics. Two field experiments at three locations were conducted in 2002 and 2003 to determine the optimum rate range that maximizes weed control and minimizes crop injury across a wide variety of soil textures and planting dates. At Beaumont, Eagle Lake, and Ganado, TX, preemergence application of 0.41 to 0.56, 0.38 to 0.43, and 0.36 to 0.42 kg ha-1 clomazone, respectively, provided optimum weed control with minimal rice injury. Data suggests that clomazone is safe to use on rice on sandy textured soils. Injury may occur, but, rates suggested from this research will minimize injury and achieve excellent weed control. As a result, amendments to the herbicide label will allow clomazone use on sandy textured soils giving rice producers more flexibility and access to another effective herbicide.
author2 Chandler, James M.
author_facet Chandler, James M.
O'Barr, John Houston
author O'Barr, John Houston
author_sort O'Barr, John Houston
title Rice (Oryza sativa L.) response to clomazone as influenced by rate, soil type, and planting date
title_short Rice (Oryza sativa L.) response to clomazone as influenced by rate, soil type, and planting date
title_full Rice (Oryza sativa L.) response to clomazone as influenced by rate, soil type, and planting date
title_fullStr Rice (Oryza sativa L.) response to clomazone as influenced by rate, soil type, and planting date
title_full_unstemmed Rice (Oryza sativa L.) response to clomazone as influenced by rate, soil type, and planting date
title_sort rice (oryza sativa l.) response to clomazone as influenced by rate, soil type, and planting date
publisher Texas A&M University
publishDate 2006
url http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/3725
work_keys_str_mv AT obarrjohnhouston riceoryzasativalresponsetoclomazoneasinfluencedbyratesoiltypeandplantingdate
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