Introduction
Giant ragweed is a dicotyledonous annual broadleaf in the Asteraceae family. Though giant ragweed is native to North America with a core range in central Ohio, the species has spread throughout parts of Asia and Europe (Hovick et al. Reference Hovick, McArdle, Harrison and Regnier2018; Montagnani et al. Reference Montagnani, Gentili, Smith, Guarino and Citterio2017). Giant ragweed has an early germination period that continues throughout the growing season, high genetic diversity and germination polymorphism, and can be extremely competitive with crops like soybean (Abul-Fatih and Bazzaz Reference Abul-Fatih and Bazzaz1979; Bassett and Crompton Reference Bassett and Crompton1982; Baysinger and Sims Reference Baysinger and Sims1991; Schutte et al. Reference Schutte, Regnier and Harrison2012). As few as one giant ragweed plant per square meter has been shown to reduce soybean yields by up to 77%, due in part to the ability of giant ragweed to rapidly accumulate biomass and reach heights of up to 6 m (Bassett and Crompton Reference Bassett and Crompton1982; Webster et al. Reference Webster, Loux, Regnier and Harrison1994). Considered by many growers to be among the most troublesome weeds in soybean production, giant ragweed appears to be spreading westward across the Corn Belt, and the number of infested row-crop acres has been increasing (Barnes et al. Reference Barnes, Johnson, Gibson and Weller2004; Gibson et al. Reference Gibson, Johnson and Hillger2006; Harre et al. Reference Harre, Nie, Robertson, Johnson, Weller and Young2017; Regnier et al. Reference Regnier, Harrison, Loux, Holloman, Venkatesh, Diekmann, Taylor, Ford, Stoltenberg, Hartzler, Davis, Schutte, Cardina, Mahoney and Johnson2016). Additionally, giant ragweed is adapting to agricultural environments and targeted control practices through higher reproductive allocation, altered emergence patterns, and the evolution of herbicide-resistance mechanisms, reflecting the high phenotypic plasticity that is often associated with this species (Abul-Fatih and Bazzaz Reference Abul-Fatih and Bazzaz1979; Albert et al. Reference Albert, Grassein, Schurr, Vieilledent and Violle2011, Hovick et al. Reference Hovick, McArdle, Harrison and Regnier2018; Patzoldt and Tranel Reference Patzoldt and Tranel2002; Stachler Reference Stachler2008).
Several families of herbicides that inhibit the acetolactate synthase (ALS) enzyme are effective for foliar and soil-residual control of giant ragweed, though multiple applications of these herbicides coupled with other herbicide modes of action and nonchemical management tactics are often necessary for season-long control of heavy infestations in soybean fields (Baysinger and Sims Reference Baysinger and Sims1992; Franey and Hart Reference Franey and Hart1999; Ganie et al. Reference Ganie, Sandell, Jugulam, Kruger, Marx and Jhala2016; Johnson et al. Reference Johnson, Loux, Nordby, Sprague, Nice, Westhoven and Stachler2007; Taylor et al. Reference Taylor, Loux, Harrison and Regnier2002). The substantial dependence on ALS inhibitors, such as cloransulam, for control of giant ragweed has contributed to the evolution and proliferation of biotypes resistant to ALS inhibitors (ALS-R) (Jasieniuk et al. Reference Jasieniuk, Brûlé-Babel and Morrison1996; Norsworthy et al. Reference Norsworthy, Ward, Shaw, Llewellyn, Nichols, Webster, Bradley, Frisvold, Powles, Burgos, Witt and Barrett2012; Tranel and Wright Reference Tranel and Wright2002). The presence of ALS-R giant ragweed was first documented in 1998 (Patzolt and Tranel Reference Patzoldt and Tranel2002) and has since been confirmed in seven US states and Ontario, Canada (Heap Reference Heap2022). These biotypes exhibit high-level cross-resistance to at least three classes of ALS-inhibiting herbicides (sulfonylureas, imidazolinones, and triazolopyrimidines) without incurring a fitness cost (Marion et al. Reference Marion, Davis and Stoltenberg2017; Patzoldt and Tranel Reference Patzoldt and Tranel2002).
Giant ragweed resistance to ALS inhibitors severely impacts effective management with preemergence, soil-residual herbicides (Loux et al. Reference Loux, Essman, Doohan, Dobbels, Johnson, Young, Zimmer and Hager2022; Taylor et al. Reference Taylor, Loux, Harrison and Regnier2002). In soybean production, these ALS-R biotypes were controlled with postemergence applications of glyphosate until the evolution and subsequent spread of glyphosate-resistant biotypes in 2004, and multiple-resistant biotypes in 2006 (Gower et al. Reference Gower, Loux, Cardina, Harrison, Sprankle, Probst, Bauman, Bugg, Curran, Currie, Harvey, Johnson, Kells, Owen, Regehr, Slack, Spaur, Sprague, Vangessel and Young2003; Heap Reference Heap2022; Stachler Reference Stachler2008). In 2016, a survey reported the suspicion and/or confirmation of giant ragweed with some form of herbicide resistance in 57% of responding midwestern counties, with multiple-resistant biotypes reported in 12 states (Regnier et al. Reference Regnier, Harrison, Loux, Holloman, Venkatesh, Diekmann, Taylor, Ford, Stoltenberg, Hartzler, Davis, Schutte, Cardina, Mahoney and Johnson2016). A study conducted on giant ragweed populations collected from fields throughout the State of Indiana identified glyphosate-resistant giant ragweed plants in 83% of the fields where ALS-R biotypes were found (Harre et al. Reference Harre, Nie, Robertson, Johnson, Weller and Young2017). Despite the widespread distribution of ALS-R biotypes, the use of ALS inhibitors for partial control of giant ragweed may still be warranted, as most populations appear to be segregating for resistance (Boe Reference Boe2019; Harre et al. Reference Harre, Nie, Robertson, Johnson, Weller and Young2017). In fact, biotypes susceptible to ALS inhibitors outnumbered resistant biotypes in more than 70% of the fields sampled in Indiana (Harre et al. Reference Harre, Nie, Robertson, Johnson, Weller and Young2017).
Though several postemergence herbicides such as protoporphyrinogen oxidase (PPO) inhibitors, auxin mimics, and glufosinate are still effective for control of multiple-resistant giant ragweed (Barnett et al. Reference Barnett, Mueller and Steckel2013; Jhala et al. Reference Jhala, Sandell and Kruger2014; Kaur et al. Reference Kaur, Sandell, Lindquist and Jhala2014; Loux et al. Reference Loux, Essman, Doohan, Dobbels, Johnson, Young, Zimmer and Hager2022; Norsworthy et al. Reference Norsworthy, Jha, Steckel and Scott2010; Vink et al. Reference Vink, Soltani, Robinson, Tardif, Lawton and Sikkema2012), maintaining giant ragweed control through the critical weed-free period of 8 to 10 wk after soybean emergence is difficult without the use of effective soil-residual herbicides (Baysinger and Sims Reference Baysinger and Sims1991). In corn production, 4-hydroxyphenylpyruvate dioxygenase (HPPD)-inhibiting herbicides have been used for soil-residual control of several broadleaf weed species including giant ragweed (Givens et al. Reference Givens, Shaw, Johnson, Weller, Young, Wilson, Owen and Jordan2009; Mitchell et al. Reference Mitchell, Bartlett, Fraser, Hawkes, Holt, Townson and Wichert2001; Sutton et al. Reference Sutton, Richards, Buren and Glasgow2002). In these systems, the HPPD inhibitor mesotrione is often applied preemergence in combination with atrazine, a photosystem II inhibitor. This strategy typically results in greater than 80% control of giant ragweed (Belfry and Sikkema Reference Belfry and Sikkema2015; Bollman et al. Reference Bollman, Kells, Bauman, Loux, Slack and Sprague2006; Loux et al. Reference Loux, Dobbels, Johnson and Young2011; Soltani et al. Reference Soltani, Shropshire and Sikkema2011).
Preemergence applications of mesotrione have received federal approval for use in soybean varieties with genetically engineered resistance to HPPD inhibitors (Anonymous 2021; USDA-APHIS 2013a; 2013b). Resistance is conferred by the insertion of a mutant HPPD gene derived either from oat (Avena sativa L.) in ‘SYHT0H2’ cultivars (Hawkes et al. Reference Hawkes, Langford, Viner, Vernooij and Dale2015 Hipskind et al. Reference Hipskind, Burgin, Jain, Terpstra, Sigareva, De Framond, Breitinger, Kramer and Gu2012; USDA-APHIS 2013b), or from Pseudomonas fluorescens in LibertyLink®-GT27® varieties (Boudec et al. Reference Boudec, Rodgers, Dumas, Sailand and Bourdon2001; USDA-APHIS 2013a). Expression of HPPD enzymes derived from these mutant HPPD genes have a lower binding affinity for HPPD-inhibiting herbicides (Boudec et al. Reference Boudec, Rodgers, Dumas, Sailand and Bourdon2001; Hawkes et al. Reference Hawkes, Langford, Viner, Vernooij and Dale2015), endowing soybean with resistance to rates of mesotrione similar to those used in corn production. Applying multiple, effective herbicide modes of action is one of the most effective tools for slowing the onset of herbicide resistance (Jasieniuk et al. Reference Jasieniuk, Brûlé-Babel and Morrison1996; Norsworthy et al. Reference Norsworthy, Ward, Shaw, Llewellyn, Nichols, Webster, Bradley, Frisvold, Powles, Burgos, Witt and Barrett2012; Young Reference Young2006). As such, the joint application of HPPD inhibitors with other effective soybean preemergence herbicides has the potential to increase giant ragweed control and decrease selection for herbicide resistance in giant ragweed. However, it should likewise be noted that the use of HPPD inhibitors in soybean may reduce the efficacy of herbicide rotation as a resistance-management strategy when these chemistries are also used in the rotational cropping systems.
No research evaluating mesotrione applied preemergence in soybean for soil-residual control of giant ragweed is present in the literature. Because mesotrione has been an effective tool for management of this weed in corn production, the co-application of this herbicide with other soybean preemergence herbicides may be a robust control tactic in future weed management programs. Therefore, the primary objectives of this study were to determine the extent of giant ragweed management and response of HPPD inhibitor-resistant soybean to (i) preemergence applications of mesotrione alone and in combination with cloransulam, metribuzin, and/or S-metolachlor for control of predominantly susceptible or ALS-R giant ragweed populations, and (ii) sequential herbicide combinations (i.e., preemergence followed by postemergence) utilizing either glufosinate or glufosinate plus fomesafen and S-metolachlor applied postemergence.
Materials and Methods
Field Experiments
Two field experiments were conducted in 2018 and 2019 at two sites near West Lafayette, Indiana: the Throckmorton Purdue Agriculture Center (TPAC; 40.17° N, 86.54° W), and a commercial field, TIP-1 (40.26° N, 87.04° W). The field at TPAC (pH 6.6, 2.9% organic matter) consisted primarily of a Toronto-Millbrook silt loam complex, whereas the TIP-1 field (pH 5.7, 1.8% organic matter) was a combination of Mahalasville, Treaty and Rainsville silt loams. The frequencies of ALS-R giant ragweed to susceptible biotypes at TPAC and TIP-1 prior to initiating this research were 10% and 70%, respectively (N.T. Harre, unpublished data).
Each experimental area was sprayed with paraquat (Gramoxone 2.0 SL®; Syngenta Crop Protection, Greensboro, NC) followed by a combination of disking and field cultivating prior to planting. Soybean was planted at 346,000 seeds ha–1 in 76-cm rows at a depth of 2.5 to 5 cm. A ‘SYHT0H2’ soybean cultivar (maturity group 3; Syngenta) (Hipskind et al. Reference Hipskind, Burgin, Jain, Terpstra, Sigareva, De Framond, Breitinger, Kramer and Gu2012) was planted in May of 2018, and due to the deregulation of LibertyLink®-GT27® varieties, ‘Stine 33GA13’ soybeans (USDA-APHIS 2013a) were planted in June of 2019 after a wet spring that delayed field operations. Plots were 3m by 9m with herbicides applied to the center two rows of each four-row plot using a CO2-pressurized backpack sprayer and a 2-m handheld spray boom equipped with extended-range, flat-fan nozzles (XR 8002VS; TeeJet® Spraying Systems, Wheaton, IL) delivering 140 L ha–1 at 207 kPa. All preemergence herbicides were applied immediately following planting.
Two experiments were initiated at each site, with either preemergence-only or sequential (preemergence/postemergence) applications. The preemergence-only experiment used a factorial design to evaluate the addition of mesotrione (177 g ai ha–1) to other soybean preemergence herbicide programs that included cloransulam (32 g ai ha–1), metribuzin (315 g ai ha–1), and/or S-metolachlor (1,600 g ai ha–1) for soil-residual control of giant ragweed and soybean response (Table 1). The second experiment was a factorial of preemergence and postemergence herbicide treatments applied sequentially. Both experiments included two commercial herbicide premixes commonly recommended for preemergence control of giant ragweed in soybean: sulfentrazone (283 g ai ha–1) and cloransulam (37 g ai ha–1), and chlorimuron (19 g ai ha–1), flumioxazin (69 g ai ha–1), and pyroxasulfone (87 g ai ha–1). The postemergence application included either glufosinate (655 g ai ha–1) or glufosinate plus fomesafen (266 g ai ha–1) and S-metolachlor (1,217 g ai ha–1). The postemergence applications were made at 21 d after planting (DAP) when soybeans were at the V2 growth stage and included ammonium sulfate (N-PAK® AMS Liquid; Winfield Solutions, LLC, St. Paul, MN) at 10 g L–1.
Frequency of Resistance to ALS Inhibitors
Both experiments were conducted at two different field sites based on the expected prevalence of giant ragweed biotypes resistant to ALS inhibitors. The only mechanism known to confer ALS-R in giant ragweed is a single-nucleotide polymorphism in the ALS gene (Trp754Leu) (Marion et al. Reference Marion, Davis and Stoltenberg2017; Patzoldt and Tranel Reference Patzoldt and Tranel2002). Thus, a high-throughput molecular assay designed by Harre et al. (Reference Harre, Nie, Robertson, Johnson, Weller and Young2017) was appropriate for resistance screening (Délye et al. Reference Délye, Duhoux, Pernin, Riggins and Tranel2015; Yu and Powles Reference Yu and Powles2014). In 2018, 16% and 71% of the plants sampled in the nontreated plots of each experiment were resistant to ALS inhibitors at TPAC and TIP-1, respectively. In 2019, the experiments were conducted in a different field at TPAC where the frequency of ALS-R was considerably greater (57%) than the year prior, though it remained similar at TIP-1 (73%).
Data Collection
The area within the center two soybean rows was evaluated. Soybean injury and giant ragweed control were visually rated at 14, 21, and 42 DAP on a scale of 0 to 100%, with 0 being no injury and 100 being plant death. Ratings were also taken at 28 and 35 DAP in the sequential experiment. Soybean stand counts were taken at 21 DAP by counting the number of plants in 1 m of each of the center two rows in each plot, and the average count per meter of row was analyzed. Giant ragweed density counts were taken at 21 and 42 DAP, and biomass was collected at 42 DAP and oven-dried at 50 C until the weight was constant. Density counts were taken by randomly placing a 0.5-m2 quadrat at two different locations between the center two soybean rows in each plot. These locations were marked with wire flags, and the quadrats were placed in the same locations for the 21 and 42 DAP counts. Biomass was harvested from the same quadrat area used for density counts. Density and biomass data were combined over locations within each plot, yielding a total measured area of 1 m2 per plot for analysis. Both biomass and density measurements for each treated plot were analyzed as a percent reduction compared with the nontreated. Other weed species such as fall panicum (Panicum dichotomiflorum Michx.), ivyleaf morningglory (Ipomoea hederacea Jacq.), and velvetleaf (Abutilon theophrasti Medik.) were present in the experiments, but these infestations were minor relative to giant ragweed (data not presented).
Experimental Design and Analysis
Treatments were arranged in a randomized complete block design with four replications. Each experiment was conducted twice at both sites over the 2018 and 2019 growing seasons. Data were tested for normality and constancy of variance using PROC UNIVARIATE in SAS® 9.4 (SAS Institute Inc., Cary, NC), or through visual inspection of histograms and quantile-quantile (Q-Q) plots of the residuals, and plots of residuals vs. fitted values. All data were subjected to ANOVA using PROC GLIMMIX in SAS®. Treatment means were separated using Tukey-Kramer’s HSD at an alpha level of 0.05.
In the preemergence-only experiment, fixed effects included a factorial of residual herbicide treatments, the addition of mesotrione, site, and year. Data were combined over sites, years, and residual herbicides other than mesotrione when these effects and their associated interactions were not significant (P > 0.05). Orthogonal contrasts were used to compare the combined efficacy of all treatments that included mesotrione with the commercial standards. In the sequential experiment, fixed effects included a factorial of preemergence and postemergence herbicide treatment, year, and site. Similarly, data were combined over years, sites, and treatments where appropriate.
Results and Discussion
Soybean Injury
Preemergence herbicide treatments did not cause soybean stand loss in either experiment (data not presented). In prior research evaluating soybean varieties that expressed the mutant HPPD gene from Pseudomonas fluorescens (hppdPfW336), soybean biomass was reduced by up to 25% after a preemergence application of 210 g ai ha–1 of mesotrione (Schultz et al. Reference Schultz, Weber, Allen and Bradley2015). In the present study, both soybean varieties showed robust resistance to preemergence applications of mesotrione at the rate used in these experiments (177 g ai ha–1). Though soybean biomass and yield were not evaluated, no stunting or bleaching symptomology consistent with injury from an HPPD inhibitor was observed in either experiment in treatments with mesotrione. Data for general soybean injury (stunting, chlorosis, leaf malformation) were combined over sites and separated by year based on ANOVA. In 2018, an average of 11% soybean injury was observed from applications of the premix of chlorimuron, flumioxazin, and pyroxasulfone at 14 DAP, though injury from this treatment was less than 6% at subsequent rating timings. This level of injury at 14 DAP was greater than all other treatments, where less than 5% injury was observed at each evaluation timing (data not presented). In 2019, soybean injury was less than 6% in all treatments and at all rating timings (data not presented). The difference in injury between years may be attributed to variable environmental conditions or the differential response to PPO-inhibiting herbicides inherent to some soybean varieties (Dayan et al Reference Dayan, Weete, Duke and Hancock1997). Soybean genetics related to mesotrione resistance did not lead to the difference in injury between years.
Similar to the preemergence-only experiment, 11% injury was observed in 2018 from preemergence applications of the premix of chlorimuron, flumioxazin, and pyroxasulfone at 14 DAP in the sequential experiment, and less than 6% injury was observed in all treatments in 2019 (data not presented). For evaluations in the sequential experiment between 28 and 42 DAP, soybean injury data were combined over years, sites, and preemergence treatments. Injury at 28 DAP (1 wk after the postemergence application) was greater in treatments that included glufosinate plus fomesafen and S-metolachlor (17%) than treatments that only included glufosinate (6%) (t1 = 16.82, P < 0.0001). Soybean injury remained evident in treatments with glufosinate plus fomesafen and S-metolachlor at the 42 DAP rating (5%), which was greater than in treatments where only glufosinate was applied postemergence (1%) (t1 = 11.88, P < 0.0001). Injury in the former treatment was consistent with applications of fomesafen (bronzing and spray droplet–sized necrotic lesions) (Hager et al. Reference Hager, Wax, Bollero and Stoller2003; Legleiter and Bradley Reference Legleiter and Bradley2008).
Giant Ragweed Efficacy: Preemergence-Only Experiment
In the preemergence-only experiment at 21 DAP, control of giant ragweed was 80% or greater across years and sites in treatments with mesotrione (data not presented). Efficacy in many treatments had declined by 42 DAP, resulting in the greatest differences between treatments at the 42 DAP timing. Thus, further discussion of the efficacy of these treatments on giant ragweed will consist of data collected at 42 DAP. The interaction between site and treatment was not significant for any response variable, so all data were combined over sites. Control data were also combined over years. Among the factorial herbicide treatments, giant ragweed control was greater in treatments that included cloransulam (20% to 30%) than treatments that only included metribuzin and/or S-metolachlor (3% to 12%) (Table 2). Giant ragweed control was improved with the addition of mesotrione, including mesotrione alone, ranging from 82% to 90% (Table 2). Despite the factorial interaction of mesotrione with the other residual herbicides, the effect of mesotrione (F1,206 = 2,078) was greater than the effect of the other herbicides (F7,206 = 11), resulting in greater control in treatments with mesotrione (85%) compared with those same treatments without mesotrione (17%) (F1,107 = 1,621, P < 0.0001). Including additional preemergence herbicides with alternative modes of action did not increase giant ragweed control beyond mesotrione alone (Table 2). However, the addition of these herbicide mode-of-action groups should at least partially reduce the risk of giant ragweed evolving resistance to mesotrione.
a Means within a column under the same heading that are followed by the same letter are not different according to Tukey-Kramer’s HSD (α = 0.05).
b Control ratings were combined over data collected in 2018 and 2019.
c Density reduction in each treatment was determined relative to the nontreated.
Overall, control of giant ragweed with mesotrione in this experiment was similar to what other researchers have found in corn production. In a study summarizing data over 2 yr across four midwestern states, control from the highest rate of mesotrione (210 g ai ha–1) ranged from approximately 75% to 90% (Bollman et al. Reference Bollman, Kells, Bauman, Loux, Slack and Sprague2006), similar to what has been reported by other research groups (Belfry and Sikkema Reference Belfry and Sikkema2015; Loux et al. Reference Loux, Dobbels, Johnson and Young2011). In agreement with these prior studies, control of giant ragweed in treatments with mesotrione was 82% to 90% in this study (Table 2).
In 2018, the density of giant ragweed was reduced more with cloransulam than with S-metolachlor (Table 2). Giant ragweed density was similar between treatments with cloransulam and treatments with mesotrione, despite mesotrione resulting in greater control (Table 2). Whereas the number of giant ragweed plants may have been similar between these treatments in 2018, many plants in treatments where mesotrione was applied had emerged later in the season than plants in treatments without mesotrione, which is demonstrated in the subsequent comparison of biomass data. In 2019, density data were combined over herbicide treatments, as mesotrione was the only significant main effect and there was no interaction between the main effects. Giant ragweed density was reduced by 86% in treatments with mesotrione relative to the nontreated, whereas treatments without mesotrione reduced density by 32% (Table 3). Biomass data were combined over years, sites, and herbicides other than mesotrione. Giant ragweed biomass was reduced by 84% in treatments with mesotrione, whereas treatments without mesotrione increased biomass by 34% relative to the nontreated (Table 3). Although an increase in biomass may seem counterintuitive, these other herbicides reduced the competition from other weed species present in the trial (data not presented), allowing the surviving giant ragweed plants to grow more vigorously in these plots compared with the nontreated plots.
a Means within a column are not different according to Tukey-Kramer’s HSD (α = 0.05).
b Data from preemergence herbicide treatments were combined into two groups based on the inclusion of mesotrione.
c Density and biomass reduction were determined relative to the nontreated.
d Biomass reduction was calculated from data collected in 2018 and 2019. Negative values indicate that giant ragweed biomass was greater in treated plots compared with the nontreated.
The efficacy of mesotrione for control of giant ragweed was also compared with two soybean herbicide premixes that are considered to be commercial standards for residual control of giant ragweed: sulfentrazone and cloransulam, and chlorimuron, flumioxazin, and pyroxasulfone. Orthogonal contrasts were used to determine that giant ragweed control, density reduction, and biomass reduction were greater for the pooled mesotrione treatments compared with each of the commercial premixes at 42 DAP (Table 4). Across all of the herbicide treatments in the preemergence-only experiment, only those treatments that included mesotrione reduced giant ragweed biomass relative to the nontreated plots (Tables 3 and 4).
a Density and biomass reduction were determined relative to the nontreated. Negative values indicate that giant ragweed density and/or biomass were greater in treated plots compared with the nontreated.
b Means pooled over all treatments that contained mesotrione.
c Orthogonal contrast 1: mesotrione mixtures vs. sulfentrazone + cloransulam; orthogonal contrast 2: mesotrione mixtures vs. chlorimuron + flumioxazin + pyroxasulfone. Significance designated as ***= P < 0.001.
Control of giant ragweed with cloransulam was similar at both sites, despite a lower frequency of ALS-R at TPAC. Even at TPAC in 2018, when the frequency of ALS-R was 16% in the nontreated plots, control in treatments with cloransulam (but without mesotrione) was less than 40% at 42 DAP (data not presented). This was similar to what has been observed with preemergence-applied ALS inhibitors in previous research on giant ragweed populations that included ALS-R biotypes (Taylor et al. Reference Taylor, Loux, Harrison and Regnier2002). In 2018, the average density of giant ragweed in the nontreated plots at TPAC was greater than 70 plants m2 (data not shown). Even with an assumption of 100% control of susceptible plants with cloransulam, more than 10 resistant plants per m2 would still remain, which could result in near-complete yield loss if left unmanaged (Baysinger and Sims Reference Baysinger and Sims1991; Webster et al. Reference Webster, Loux, Regnier and Harrison1994). Other researchers have suggested that use of ALS inhibitors for control of ALS-R giant ragweed should be “de-emphasized” (Taylor et al. Reference Taylor, Loux, Harrison and Regnier2002). However, because this herbicide can be highly effective on susceptible biotypes (Franey and Hart Reference Franey and Hart1999; Loux et al. Reference Loux, Essman, Doohan, Dobbels, Johnson, Young, Zimmer and Hager2022), cloransulam still has value for partial control of segregating populations. When supplemented with other effective preemergence herbicides like mesotrione, in conjunction with postemergence herbicides and nonchemical control tactics, the utility of ALS inhibitors like cloransulam may be sustainable (Boe Reference Boe2019).
Giant Ragweed Efficacy: Sequential Experiment
Similar to the preemergence-only experiment, treatments with mesotrione in the sequential experiment generally resulted in greater control of giant ragweed at 21 DAP than treatments without mesotrione, including the commercial standard premixes (data not presented). Glufosinate is often highly effective for foliar control of giant ragweed (Kaur et al. Reference Kaur, Sandell, Lindquist and Jhala2014; Wiesbrook et al. Reference Wiesbrook, Johnson, Hart, Bradley and Wax2001). In this experiment, all giant ragweed plants that had emerged by 21 DAP (10 to 15 cm) were controlled by the postemergence application of either glufosinate or glufosinate plus fomesafen and S-metolachlor. At 42 DAP, the main effects of preemergence herbicide treatment and the interaction of the preemergence treatment with the postemergence application were not significant. Therefore, data for each postemergence treatment were combined over respective preemergence treatments.
Similar trends were observed across response variables at 42 DAP. Across all site-years, control of giant ragweed at 42 DAP and biomass reduction were greater than 90%, regardless of which postemergence treatment was applied (Table 5). At both sites in 2018, giant ragweed control, density reduction, and biomass reduction were greater in treatments where glufosinate plus fomesafen and S-metolachlor were applied, compared with treatments that only included glufosinate (Table 5). The largest difference between treatments was observed in 2018, where giant ragweed density was reduced an additional 27% with the inclusion of fomesafen and S-metolachlor. In 2019, efficacy was similar between postemergence treatments at TPAC, while the inclusion of fomesafen and S-metolachlor increased the efficacy of the postemergence application at TIP-1 (Table 5). No significant precipitation was recorded at TPAC after the postemergence herbicides were applied in 2019, whereas TIP-1 received 3.7 cm of rainfall between 21 and 42 DAP (Table 6). The lack of activating rainfall at TPAC likely reduced the soil-residual activity of fomesafen at that site. Regardless, efficacy of both postemergence applications was 93% or greater across all response variables in 2019 (Table 5).
a Abbreviations: Tip-1, a commercial field; TPAC, Throckmorton Purdue Agriculture Center.
b Postemergence herbicides were applied at 21 d after planting, and means were calculated from data combined over preemergence herbicide treatments.
c Means within a column with the same letter are not different according to Tukey-Kramer’s HSD (α = 0.05).
d Density and biomass reduction were determined relative to the nontreated.
e All postemergence applications included ammonium sulfate at 9.53 kg ha–1.
a Data for TPAC and TIP-1 were generated by weather stations at the Throckmorton Purdue Agricultural Center and the Purdue University Airport (KLAF), respectively.
b Abbreviations: Tip-1, a commercial field; TPAC, Throckmorton Purdue Agriculture Center; WAP, wk after planting.
Glufosinate is rapidly degraded by soil microbes, and applications do not result in soil-residual weed control (Aulakh and Jhala Reference Aulakh and Jhala2015; Bartsch and Tebbe Reference Bartsch and Tebbe1989; Takano and Dayan Reference Takano and Dayan2020). In the preemergence-only experiment, applications of S-metolachlor alone did not control giant ragweed (Table 2). Several studies have shown that fomesafen can be highly effective for foliar control of giant ragweed (Barnett et al. Reference Barnett, Mueller and Steckel2013; Baysinger and Sims Reference Baysinger and Sims1992; Norsworthy et al. Reference Norsworthy, Riar, Jha and Scott2011; Taylor et al. Reference Taylor, Loux, Harrison and Regnier2002). This experiment demonstrates that soil-residual control of giant ragweed with fomesafen is also possible, given sufficient activating rainfall.
High-level resistance to foliar applications of fomesafen has been recently confirmed in a giant ragweed population from Wisconsin (Faleco et al. Reference Faleco, Arneson, Stoltenberg and Werle2021), though the characterization of the resistance mechanism is limited thus far. Fomesafen is a diphenylether herbicide that inhibits the PPO enzyme. In common ragweed (Ambrosia artemisiifolia L.), an Arg98Leu mutation in the PPX2 target-site gene has been shown to confer an 80-fold level of resistance to postemergence applications of fomesafen, and a 10-fold level of resistance to the PPO inhibitor flumioxazin applied preemergence (Rousonelos et al. Reference Rousonelos, Lee, Moreira, VanGessel and Tranel2012). The efficacy of fomesafen for soil-residual control of PPO inhibitor–resistant giant ragweed has not yet been evaluated, though resistance to both preemergence and postemergence applications of fomesafen has been documented in several weed species (Heap Reference Heap2022; Lillie et al. Reference Lillie, Giacomini and Tranel2020). Whether preemergence-applied PPO inhibitors are still effective for control of PPO inhibitor–resistant weeds is highly dependent on species and resistance mechanism, in addition to the specific rate and type of PPO inhibitor applied (Copeland et al. Reference Copeland, Giacomini, Tranel, Montgomery and Steckel2018; Lillie et al. Reference Lillie, Giacomini and Tranel2020; Wuerffel et al. Reference Wuerffel, Young, Tranel and Young2015).
Overall, these results demonstrate that mesotrione can be more effective than many existing soybean herbicides for preemergence control of multiple-resistant giant ragweed. A survey of giant ragweed infestations in Indiana indicated that biotypes susceptible to ALS inhibitors outnumber resistant biotypes in nearly half of ALS-R populations (Harre et al. Reference Harre, Nie, Robertson, Johnson, Weller and Young2017), and only one instance of resistance to PPO inhibitors has been reported globally (Faleco et al. Reference Faleco, Arneson, Stoltenberg and Werle2021), though not yet confirmed in a published research article. Mesotrione, cloransulam, and fomesafen can all contribute soil-residual control of giant ragweed populations that are segregating for resistance, which is important for managing weeds throughout the critical weed-free period of soybean. Sequential herbicide applications can be utilized in addition to nonchemical weed management tactics such as reduced tillage (Harrison et al. Reference Harrison, Regnier and Schmoll2003), crop rotation (Goplen et al. Reference Goplen, Sheaffer, Becker, Coulter, Breitenbach, Behnken, Johnson and Gunsolus2017; Regnier et al. Reference Regnier, Harrison, Loux, Holloman, Venkatesh, Diekmann, Taylor, Ford, Stoltenberg, Hartzler, Davis, Schutte, Cardina, Mahoney and Johnson2016), and cover crops (Regnier et al. Reference Regnier, Harrison, Loux, Holloman, Venkatesh, Diekmann, Taylor, Ford, Stoltenberg, Hartzler, Davis, Schutte, Cardina, Mahoney and Johnson2016) to control giant ragweed throughout the soybean growing season and reduce selection for herbicide resistance. Integration of these management strategies is essential for sustainable management of this extremely competitive species with a propensity to develop resistance to herbicides.
Practical Implications
Soybean growers have few herbicide options for soil-residual control of giant ragweed. This research demonstrates that mesotrione applied preemergence in soybean varieties having appropriate traits can result in more effective residual control of giant ragweed than many herbicides currently available for use in soybean. Furthermore, sequential applications of foliar herbicides that target smaller weeds typically result in greater control and a lower propensity for resistance development. Greater soil-residual control allows more time for growers to make sequential herbicide applications to appropriately sized weeds, partially mitigating the challenges associated with managing a large number of hectares. Ultimately, when applied in combination with other soil-residual herbicides such as cloransulam and as a part of sequential application programs with foliar herbicides such as glufosinate and fomesafen, mesotrione can be used to control giant ragweed throughout the soybean growing season and reduce the selection for herbicide-resistant biotypes through the integration of multiple, effective modes of action. Conversely, excessive reliance on HPPD inhibitors to control weeds in additional rotational crops could serve to accelerate the development of resistant weed species if this technology is not stewarded appropriately.
Acknowledgments
This research received no specific grant from any funding agency, commercial or not-for-profit sectors. Author B.C. Westrich is currently employed by Syngenta Crop Protection. No competing interests have been declared.