Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-g7gxr Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-10T07:13:38.520Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Utility of isoxaflutole-based herbicide programs in HPPD-tolerant cotton production systems

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  16 March 2022

Rodger Farr*
Affiliation:
Former Graduate Assistant, Department of Crop, Soil, and Environmental Sciences, University of Arkansas, Fayetteville, AR, USA
Jason K. Norsworthy
Affiliation:
Distinguished Professor and Elms Farming Chair of Weed Science, Department of Crop, Soil, and Environmental Sciences, University of Arkansas, Fayetteville, AR, USA
L. Tom Barber
Affiliation:
Professor and Extension Weed Scientist, University of Arkansas Systems Division of Agriculture, Lonoke, AR, USA
Thomas R. Butts
Affiliation:
Assistant Professor and Extension Weed Scientist, Department of Crop, Soil, and Environmental Sciences, University of Arkansas System Division of Agriculture, Lonoke, AR, USA
Trent Roberts
Affiliation:
Associate Professor, Department of Crop, Soil, and Environmental Sciences, University of Arkansas, Fayetteville, AR, USA
*
Author for correspondence: Rodger Farr, 2260 E. Hayes Center Rd, Wellfleet, NE 69170. Email: rfarr3200@gmail.com
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Palmer amaranth has developed resistance to at least seven herbicide sites of action in the Cotton Belt of the United States, leaving producers with fewer options to manage this weed. Previous research with corn and newly commercially released soybean systems have found the use of 4-hydroxyphenylpyruvate dioxygenase (HPPD)-inhibiting herbicides such as isoxaflutole (IFT) to be effective at managing Palmer amaranth. Consequently, a new transgenic cultivar of cotton is being developed with tolerance to IFT, allowing for in-crop applications of the herbicide. Two separate studies were conducted near Marianna, AR, in 2019 and replicated in 2020, to investigate the crop safety and utility of IFT when added to cotton herbicide programs. Herbicide programs featured IFT as a preemergence or early-postemergence option, residual herbicides in subsequent postemergence applications, and the presence or absence of a layby application. The use of IFT did not significantly impact cotton injury or yield, whereas the use of layered residual herbicides, including IFT, increased Palmer amaranth control compared to those without. Regardless of earlier use of IFT, layby applications were needed for season-long control of Palmer amaranth, entireleaf morningglory, broadleaf signalgrass, and johnsongrass, as evidenced by greater than a 20 percentage point improvement in control of all weeds when a layby application was made. Overall, findings from these studies indicate IFT to be a suitable tool for managing Palmer amaranth and will provide an additional site of action for cotton herbicide programs. Sequential herbicide applications and overlaying residuals were found to be paramount for managing Palmer amaranth throughout the season.

Type
Research Article
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution and reproduction, provided the original article is properly cited.
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2022. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of the Weed Science Society of America

Introduction

The ability of Palmer amaranth to adapt and invade cropping systems (Sauer Reference Sauer1972) has enabled it to become the dominant weed of concern in cotton production systems across the mid-South United States over the past 50 yr (Sauer Reference Sauer1972; Van Wychen Reference Van Wychen2019). Management concerns with Palmer amaranth have been exacerbated throughout the mid-South, where resistant populations have evolved to many of the available herbicide options for weed control in cotton production systems. Currently, Palmer amaranth has developed resistance to microtubule-inhibiting herbicides such as pendimethalin (Gossett et al. Reference Gossett, Murdock and Toler1992), acetolactate synthase (ALS)-inhibiting herbicides such as trifloxysulfuron (Burgos et al. Reference Burgos, Kuk and Talbert2001; Norsworthy et al. Reference Norsworthy, Griffith, Scott, Smith and Oliver2008), synthetic auxin herbicides such as dicamba (Heap Reference Heap2021; Shyam et al. Reference Shyam, Borgato, Peterson, Dille and Jugulam2021; Steckel Reference Steckel2020), 5-enolpyruvyl-shikimate-3-phosphate (EPSPS)-inhibiting herbicides such as glyphosate (Norsworthy et al. Reference Norsworthy, Griffith, Scott, Smith and Oliver2008), protoporphyrinogen oxidase (PPO)-inhibiting herbicides such as fomesafen (Varanasi et al. Reference Varanasi, Brabham and Norsworthy2018), 4-hydroxyphenylpyruvate dioxygenase (HPPD)-inhibiting herbicides such as mesotrione (Jhala et al. Reference Jhala, Sandell, Rana, Kruger and Knezevic2014), and very-long-chain fatty acid (VLCFA)-inhibiting herbicides such as S-metolachlor (Brabham et al. Reference Brabham, Norsworthy, Houston, Varanasi and Barber2019).

Economically, Palmer amaranth can cause dramatic reductions in cotton yield, reducing lint production by 59% at Palmer amaranth densities of 1.1 plants m−2 (Morgan et al. Reference Morgan, Bautmann and Chandler2001). As weed densities increase, cotton lint yield has been found to linearly decrease by 5.9% to 11% with each additional plant per meter row (Rowland et al. Reference Rowland, Murray and Verhalen1999). In addition to causing direct yield losses, heavy infestations also may reduce cotton harvest efficiencies. Palmer amaranth densities of 3,260 weeds ha−1 have been shown to increase the time to harvest a hectare of cotton by 3 h (Smith et al. Reference Smith, Baker and Steele2000). Reduced harvest efficacy can result in significant economic loss, costing producers additional fuel, time, and wear on equipment. The development of herbicide resistance also has exposed the true costs of herbicide-resistant weeds in more expensive herbicide programs, technology fees for herbicide-resistant crops, and the addition of other management practices such as tillage and hand weeding (DeVore et al. Reference DeVore, Norsworthy and Brye2012).

To offer more herbicide options for cotton producers, the BASF company has developed a genetically modified line of cotton that is tolerant to glyphosate, glufosinate, and isoxaflutole (IFT). The introduction of IFT to cotton production systems offers producers an additional site of action that previously had not been available for use (Barber et al. Reference Barber, Boyd, Norsworthy, Burgos, Bertucci and Selden2021). Isoxaflutole is in the isoxazole chemical family. The addition of IFT provides producers an additional pigment-inhibiting herbicide alongside fluridone, a phytoene desaturase inhibitor. Typically, IFT has been labeled for use in corn production as a preemergence (PRE) or early postemergence (EPOST) herbicide for the control of small-seeded broadleaf weeds and grasses (Anonymous 2019; Pallett et al. Reference Pallett, Little, Sheekey and Veerasekaran1998). It has been previously reported that IFT is an effective tank-mixture partner with photosystem II (PSII)-inhibiting herbicides for the control of glyphosate-resistant Palmer amaranth when used as a part of a glufosinate-based herbicide programs (Chahal et al. Reference Chahal, Jugulam and Jhala2019; Chahal and Jhala Reference Chahal and Jhala2018; Jhala et al. Reference Jhala, Sandell, Rana, Kruger and Knezevic2014; Stephenson and Bond Reference Stephenson and Bond2012).

When applied postemergence (POST), the combination of HPPD- and PSII-inhibiting herbicides has been shown to have a synergistic effect, whereas PRE applications of similar tank-mixtures were additive in nature (Chahal and Jhala Reference Chahal and Jhala2018; Kohrt and Sprague Reference Kohrt and Sprague2017; Meyer et al. Reference Meyer, Norsworthy, Young, Steckel, Bradley, Johnson, Loux, Davis, Kruger, Bararpour, Ikley, Spaunhorst and Butts2016). Although HPPD-resistant populations of Palmer amaranth have been documented, the pairing of HPPD-inhibiting herbicides such as IFT with PSII-inhibiting herbicides has been shown to be effective at overcoming resistance to either site of action (Chahal et al. Reference Chahal, Jugulam and Jhala2019; Chahal and Jhala Reference Chahal and Jhala2018). In IFT-tolerant cotton, producers will have the flexibility to apply IFT PRE or EPOST.

In 2019 and 2020, field experiments were established to investigate the utility of IFT-tolerant cotton herbicide programs in terms of weed control and crop safety. The objectives of these studies were to determine the effectiveness of different IFT-based herbicide programs on weed control and to evaluate crop safety and tolerance of IFT-tolerant cotton to different IFT-based herbicide programs in Arkansas.

Materials and Methods

Crop Safety

Stewarded field trials were conducted in the summers of 2019 and 2020 to determine the crop safety of various IFT-based herbicide programs in IFT-tolerant cotton. Field trials were conducted at the Lon Mann Cotton Research and Extension Center near Marianna, AR (34.73°N, 90.74°W), on a Convent silt loam soil with 1% organic matter, 7% clay, 1% sand, and 92% silt (USDA-NRCS 2020). Each plot measured 3.9 m wide and 9.1 m long with 96-cm row spacings, allowing for four rows per plot with the two center rows being used for data collection and the outside rows acting as a buffer between applied treatments. Prior to planting, the experimental area was tilled and bedded. The trial was seeded with a four-row cone planter (Almaco, Nevada, IA) at a rate of 114,000 seeds ha−1 to a glufosinate, glyphosate, and IFT-tolerant cotton experimental line (BASF, Research Triangle, NC) The experiment was designed as a single-factor, randomized complete block design with four replications. The entire study and associated buffer area were fertilized on the basis of typical cotton production practices for Arkansas (Robertson et al. Reference Robertson, Barber and Lorenz2021). Supplemental irrigation was provided via in-furrow irrigation when rainfall was not sufficient.

Treatments consisted of different herbicide programs using IFT either PRE or EPOST along with a herbicide program that lacked IFT and a nontreated control for comparison (Tables 1 and 2). Herbicide treatments were applied at 140 L ha−1 using a CO2-pressurized backpack sprayer with TeeJet® AIXR 110015 nozzles (TeeJet Technologies, Springfield, IL), and layby applications were made using a single-nozzle boom with a TeeJet® XR8002E even flat-fan nozzle. Herbicides were applied according to standard cotton production practices with the PRE applications applied at planting (0 d after planting), EPOST at 21 d after planting, mid-POST (MPOST) at 42 d after planting, and layby applications made prior to canopy closure (approximately 63 d after planting). In addition to herbicide applications, plots were hand-weeded as needed to prevent weed interference with cotton. A 20-m buffer of Deltapine 1518XF (Bayer Crop Science, St. Louis, MO) cotton was planted in all directions from the trial and destroyed prior to harvest to prevent outcrossing from the experimental seed.

Table 1. Herbicide information for all products used in both experiments.

Table 2. Treatment structure for both experiments in 2019 and 2020. a

a Abbreviations: PRE, preemergence; EPOST, first postemergence application; MPOST, second postemergence application.

To evaluate phytotoxic crop injuries, visual estimations of crop injury (ratings) based on chlorosis, necrosis, and stunting were taken weekly until 28 d after the layby application. Ratings were based on a 0 to 100 scale, with 0 representing no injury and 100 representing plant death. Stand counts were taken at 14 d after planting from 2 m of row in each plot. Days to 70% boll opening were taken prior to maturity and were made relative to the nontreated check in each block. Seed cotton yield was determined at cotton maturity using a two-row cotton picker, and 40 representative bolls collected per plot for fiber quality analysis (Kothari et al. Reference Kothari, Hinze, Dever and Hague2017). Fiber quality analysis was conducted at the west Tennessee Research and Extension Center in Jackson, TN, and resulted in measurements for micronaire, fiber length, uniformity, fiber strength, and elongation.

Weed Control

To evaluate the efficacy of the addition of IFT into cotton herbicide programs, studies were conducted during the summers of 2019 and 2020 at the Lon Mann Cotton Research and Extension Center near Marianna, AR, on a Convent silt loam soil similar to the crop tolerance study. In both site-years, herbicide programs were applied in bare ground conditions, which were tilled and bedded prior to PRE applications. Plots measured 1.9 m wide by 6.1 m long. The treatments and treatment structure were the same as the crop safety study (Table 2), and all applications were made at the same time as in the crop safety study. Applications were made with a CO2-pressurized backpack sprayer using TeeJet® AIXR 110015 nozzles at 140 L ha−1. Visual estimations of control of a natural population of weeds were taken every 7 d following the first application until 28 d after the layby application. In 2019, Palmer amaranth, entireleaf morningglory, johnsongrass, and broadleaf signalgrass were rated. In 2020, Palmer amaranth and entireleaf morningglory were rated. Groundcover was measured with drone imagery from a height of 55 m taken 14 d after the EPOST and MPOST applications in 2020 and 14 d after the layby application in 2019 using a DGI Phantom 4 PRO (DGI, Shenzhen, China). Percent groundcover was calculated from field imagery using the Field Analyzer software (Turf Analyzer, Fayetteville, AR) to compare groundcover coverage between treatments.

Statistical Analysis

Data were analyzed using R Statistical Software v 4.0.3 (R Foundation, Vienna, Austria). Prior to final model selection, data were evaluated for normality using Shapiro-Wilks tests, and equal variance was determined by plotting the residuals of the model (Kniss and Streibig Reference Kniss and Streibig2018). Variables that met both normality and homogeneity of variance assumptions were evaluated with linear models using base functions. Variables that failed normality or variance assumptions were analyzed using a nonparametric factorial model using the rankFD package (Brunner et al. Reference Brunner, Dette and Munk1997, Reference Brunner, Bathke and Konietschke2019) to test for year-by-treatment interactions, which were not significant for all experimental variables. Treatment effects across year and replication were determined with a Friedmans test using the pgirmess package (Giraudoux et al. Reference Giraudoux, Antonietti, Beale, Pleydell and Treglia2018). The effect of year was determined through a nonparametric Kruskal-Wallis test (Kruskal and Wallis Reference Kruskal and Wallis1952; Shah and Madden Reference Shah and Madden2004) using the pgirmess package. Orthogonal contrast analyses were conducted to evaluate Palmer amaranth control to compare the use of IFT to the nontreated, the use of IFT PRE to EPOST, the use of residual herbicides at MPOST, and the use of layby applications. Following model selection, data were subjected to a Type I ANOVA, and means were separated using LSD with Tukey’s adjustment at α = 0.05.

Results and Discussion

Crop Safety

Differences in cotton tolerance were observed over the course of the two site-years for the study (Tables 3 and 4). Preemergence treatments were determined to have a significant influence on cotton injury at 14 d after treatment (Table 3). Across both site-years, stand-alone PRE applications of fluometuron resulted in the lowest crop injury (1%). In contrast, PRE applications of fluridone resulted in higher crop injury in both site-years (6%), though this program was not different than any other program besides the programs that used only fluometuron PRE. Crop injury caused by PRE-applied IFT-containing programs was not higher or lower in either site-year to that of other programs (2% to 5% crop injury; Table 5). All PRE herbicide programs resulted in ≤10% crop injury, which has been used as a standard injury threshold in cotton (Jordan et al. Reference Jordan, Frans and McClelland1993). At 14 d after EPOST, crop safety was similar for all herbicide programs averaged over site-years (Table 3), although averaged over treatments, differences were observed between site-years (Table 3). Injury was lower in 2019 than in 2020 (Table 6), presumably due to differences in environmental conditions following application between the two site-years, with more rainfall following application in 2020 than 2019 (Figure 1).

Table 3. P-values for cotton crop safety by treatment and year for cotton injury.a,b

a Abbreviations: DAP, days after preemergence; DAEP, days after first postemergence application; DAMP, days after second postemergence application; DA Layby, days after layby application.

b Bolded values are statistically significant at α < 0.05 based on LSD with Tukey’s adjustment.

Table 4. P-values for cotton fiber quality by treatment and year. a

a Bolded values are statistically significant at α <0.05 based on LSD with Tukey’s adjustment.

Table 5. Injury to isoxaflutole-tolerant cotton at 14 d after preemergence applications, averaged over 2019 and 2020 and injury 14 days after mid-POST application in 2019.a,b

a Abbreviations: Ace, acetochlor; DAMP, days after second postemergence application; DAP, days after preemergence; dim, dimethenamid-P; EPOST, first postemergence application; fb, followed by; flum, flumioxazin; fluo, fluometuron; glu, glufosinate; gly, glyphosate; ift, isoxaflutole; MPOST, second postemergence application; PRE, preemergence; smoc, S-metolachlor.

b Means followed by the same letter within a column are not statistically different based on LSD with Tukey’s adjustment (α=0.05)

Table 6. Cotton injury and quality factors in 2019 and 2020.a,b

a Abbreviations: DAEP, days after first postemergence application; DA Layby, days after layby application.

b Means followed by the same letter within a column are not statistically different based on LSD with Tukey’s adjustment (α = 0.05).

Figure 1. Rainfall and temperature data over the growing season at the Lon Mann Cotton Research Center near Marianna, AR in 2019 (A) and 2020 (B).

At 14 d after the MPOST (DAMP), there was a significant treatment–by–site-year interaction (Table 3). In 2019, cotton injury was influenced by herbicide treatment. Three programs caused up to 3% injury to cotton in 2019; fluometuron followed by glufosinate plus S-metolachlor followed by glyphosate, glufosinate, acetochlor; fluometuron followed by IFT, glufosinate; and glyphosate followed by S-metolachlor, glufosinate, and glyphosate; and fluridone with fluometuron followed by IFT, glufosinate, and glyphosate followed by S-metolachlor, glufosinate, and glyphosate. However, the injury that resulted from either the program containing fluometuron followed by glufosinate, S-metolachlor followed by glyphosate, glufosinate, acetochlor or the program containing fluridone with fluometuron followed by IFT, glufosinate, and glyphosate followed by S-metolachlor, glufosinate, and glyphosate were not found to be different than those programs that did not express any injury (Table 5). Injury observed in these programs was most likely due to the addition of chloroacetamide herbicides in the MPOST application. Applications of chloroacetamide herbicides and glufosinate have been shown to be injurious to glufosinate-tolerant cotton, but well within commercial tolerance and not detrimental to yield (Culpepper et al. Reference Culpepper, York, Robert and Whitaker2009). Injury in 2019 also was within acceptable levels. In 2020, there were no differences among the programs, and all injury was less than the 10% acceptable injury threshold. There also was not a program effect at 14 d following the layby application in either year, although there was a difference between the two site-years of the study. Cotton injury was greater in 2020 than in 2019, presumably due to higher temperatures in 2020 after application compared with 2019 (Figure 1).

Cotton stand at 14 d after planting was not different for herbicide program and site-year (Table 3). Cotton boll opening also was not affected by treatment. Seventy percent boll opening was different between site-years, with 2020 reaching 70% boll opening 1 d later than in 2019 (Table 6). This may be because two hurricanes passed over the trial area, causing defoliation in 2020. Despite the hurricanes and any observed injury in the field, there were no differences in yield among the treatments or between years. Fiber quality measurements did not differ among treatments (Table 4). There was a year effect on fiber length and uniformity, with lower fiber length and uniformity in 2020 (Table 6). These differences are attributed to the environmental conditions after desiccation, primarily due to the hurricane events.

The results reported above support that the addition of IFT to cotton weed management herbicide programs is suitable for IFT-tolerant cotton systems. Crop injury measured throughout the growing season in both site-years was within the range of acceptable crop safety. Most injury appeared to be transient and dissipated throughout the season, and did not have any impact on cotton yield. Fiber quality was not influenced by the presence or absence of IFT in the herbicide programs either.

Weed Control

At 21 d following planting, Palmer amaranth control among the herbicide programs did not differ, although there was a difference between site-years (Table 7). The difference in year showed that there was greater overall control in 2020 than in 2019 in all programs, potentially because of differences in weed population dynamics and environment, as the experiment were not conducted in the same area of the field in consecutive years (Table 8). At 21 d after EPOST (DAEP), weed control among herbicide treatments did not differ for entireleaf morningglory, broadleaf signalgrass, or johnsongrass (Tables 7 and 9). There was, however, a treatment-by-year interaction at 21 DAEP for Palmer amaranth (Table 7). Treatment had an effect on Palmer amaranth control in 2019, whereas all herbicide programs provided similar control in 2020. In 2019, treatments that used IFT PRE in combination with fluridone or fluometuron were found to be the most efficacious (Table 10). These findings are similar to those reported by Chalal and Jhala (Reference Chahal and Jhala2018), when there was greater Palmer amaranth control when IFT was mixed with a PSII herbicide such as fluometuron. Groundcover analysis following the EPOST application was not different across herbicide program (Table 9). Contrast analyses determined that there was not a difference between the use of IFT PRE or EPOST at 21 DAEP (P = 0.189) as well as between the presence or absence of IFT in the program (P = 0.841; data not shown). While the addition of IFT did not enhance Palmer amaranth control at this location, IFT did add an additional site of action without detriment to weed control, potentially aiding in the delay of herbicide-resistance evolution. In production areas where Palmer amaranth may be resistant to HPPD, PSII, or both sites of action, the use of IFT with a PSII herbicide such as fluometuron may still be able to provide some control where fluometuron alone may not, due to the synergistic behavior that has been shown to overcome resistance to these sites of action (Chahal and Jhala Reference Chahal and Jhala2018; Chahal et al. Reference Chahal, Jugulam and Jhala2019).

Table 7. P-values for Palmer amaranth and entireleaf morningglory control in 2019 and 2020a,b

a Abbreviations: DAP, days after preemergence; DAEP, days after first postemergence application; DAMP, days after second postemergence application.

b Bolded values are statistically significant at α = 0.05 based on LSD with Tukey’s adjustment.

Table 8. Palmer amaranth and entireleaf morningglory control averaged over treatment.a,b

a Abbreviations: DAP, days after preemergence application; DAEP, days after first postemergence application; DAMP, days after second postemergence application; PRE, preemergence.

b Means followed by the same letter within a column are not statistically different based on LSD with Tukey’s adjustment (α = 0.05).

Table 9. P-values for weed groundcover, johnsongrass control, and broadleaf signalgrass control.a,b

a Abbreviations: DAEP, days after first postemergence application; DAMP, days after second postemergence application; DA Layby, days after layby application.

b Bolded values are statistically significant at α = 0.05 based on LSD with Tukey’s adjustment.

Table 10. Observed control of Palmer amaranth and entireleaf morningglory averaged over 2019 and 2020.a,b

a Abbreviations: Ace, acetochlor; DAP, days after preemergence application; DAEP, days after postemergence application; DA Layby, days after layby application; DAMP, days after second postemergence application; dim, dimethenamid-P; fb, followed by; flum, flumioxazin; fluo, fluometuron; glu, glufosinate; gly, glyphosate; ift, isoxaflutole; PRE, preemergence, smoc, S-metolachlor.

b Means followed by the same letter within a column are not statistically different based on LSD with Tukey’s adjustment (α = 0.05).

There were differences among herbicide programs and between site-years at 14 DAMP for Palmer amaranth control (Table 7). Fluometuron PRE followed by glufosinate and S-metolachlor EPOST followed by glyphosate, glufosinate, and acetochlor MPOST as well as fluometuron PRE followed by IFT, glufosinate, and glyphosate EPOST followed by S-metolachlor, glufosinate, and glyphosate MPOST both resulted in the greatest Palmer amaranth control at 91% (Table 10). These two programs resulted in similar weed control compared to all other programs aside from the program that used IFT and fluometuron PRE followed by glufosinate and S-metolachlor EPOST followed by glyphosate and glufosinate MPOST, which resulted in only 68% Palmer amaranth control (Table 10). Based on contrast analyses comparing programs that included a residual chloroacetamide herbicide at MPOST to those that did not, those programs that included a residual resulted in greater Palmer amaranth control at 14 DAMP and 28 d after layby (Table 11). At 14 DAMP, Palmer amaranth control for those plots that contained residual herbicides was 89% on average, whereas those that did not resulted in 73% control on average. These results are likely due to the residual weed control activity that chloroacetamide herbicides have, prolonging the control of weeds such as Palmer amaranth (Culpepper et al. Reference Culpepper, York, Robert and Whitaker2009; Norsworthy et al. Reference Norsworthy, Ward, Shaw, Llewellyn, Nichols, Webster, Bradley, Frisvold, Powles, Burgos, Witt and Barrett2012; Riar et al. Reference Riar, Norsworthy, Steckel, Stephenson, Eubank and Scott2013). Although differences were in observed weed control, there were no differences in weed groundcover at the MPOST timing (Tables 8 and 9).

Table 11. Results of contrast analyses comparing the use of residuals or no residual in the mid-postemergence applications and the presence or absence of layby applications for Palmer amaranth, entireleaf morningglory, broadleaf signalgrass, and johnsongrass control averaged over year.a,b,c

a Abbreviations: DA Layby, days after layby application; DAMP, days after second postemergence application; MPOST, mid-postemergence.

b Bolded values are statistically significant at α = 0.05 based on LSD with Tukey’s adjustment.

c Values not shown due to insignificance.

Entireleaf morningglory control was influenced by herbicide program at 14 DAMP. Three programs (fluometuron PRE followed by glufosinate and S-metolachlor EPOST followed by glyphosate, glufosinate, and acetochlor MPOST; IFT and fluometuron PRE followed by glufosinate, and S-metolachlor EPOST followed by glyphosate and glufosinate MPOST; and fluometuron PRE followed by IFT, glufosinate, and glyphosate EPOST followed by S-metolachlor, glufosinate, and glyphosate MPOST) all resulted in 89% control. These three programs were similar to all other programs besides the program that used isoxaflutole with diuron followed by dimethenamid-P with glufosinate followed by glyphosate with glufosinate and the program that used fluridone with fluometuron followed by IFT, glufosinate, and glyphosate followed by S-metolachlor, glufosinate, and glyphosate with 73% and 68% control, respectively (Table 10). Lack of control was likely the result of newly emerged weeds at this time period as the residuals in these two programs at PRE and EPOST are not completely effective at controlling morningglory species, particularly fluometuron (Anonymous 2019), isoxaflutole (Stephenson and Bond Reference Stephenson and Bond2012), and diuron (Anonymous 2021). Unlike Palmer amaranth, contrast analysis of the use of residual herbicides in the MPOST applications were not significant for entireleaf morningglory, as the addition of chloroacetamide herbicides did not provide any additional benefit for morningglory control (Table 11). This is expected, as morningglory species are not controlled by chloroacetamide herbicides (Anonymous 2018, 2020). Control for the two grass species, johnsongrass and broadleaf signalgrass, were not impacted by herbicide program or by the inclusion of a residual at the MPOST application at 14 DAMP as control for all programs was greater than 95% (Table 12).

Table 12. Visible estimates of broadleaf signalgrass control, johnsonsgrass control, and groundcover.a,b

a Abbreviations: Ace, acetochlor; DA Layby, days after layby application; DAMP, days after second postemergence application; dim, dimethenamid-P; fb, followed by; flum, flumioxazin; fluo, fluometuron; glu, glufosinate; gly, glyphosate; ift, isoxaflutole; PRE, preemergence, smoc, S-metolachlor.

b Means followed by the same letter within a column are not statistically different based on LSD with Tukey’s adjustment (α = 0.05).

The observed Palmer amaranth, entireleaf morningglory, johnsongrass, and broadleaf signalgrass control following the layby applications was different among treatments. Programs that used a layby application had the greatest Palmer amaranth control ranging from 67% to 85%, while Palmer amaranth control in programs without layby applications ranged from 35% to 36% (Table 10). Similar trends were observed in broadleaf signalgrass, johnsongrass (Table 11), and entireleaf morningglory (Table 10). Contrast analysis comparing the use of layby applications to not resulted in a significant increase in average weed control for all species evaluated. With the addition of a layby application, Palmer amaranth control increased from 36% to 78%, entireleaf morningglory control increased from 49% to 80%, broadleaf signalgrass control increased from 64% to 88%, and johnsongrass control increased from 47% to 83% at 28 d after layby applications (Table 11).

Aerial imagery data suggest that the weedy groundcover was influenced by treatment following the layby application. Just as with the observed Palmer amaranth control, the treatments that used a layby application decreased weedy groundcover relative to no layby application (Table 12). The use of the additional herbicide application provided plots with greater weed control primarily due the longer residual activity of the herbicides applied as well as additional POST weed control. Although the study was conducted in a bare-ground setting, similar results would likely be observed in a row-crop environment, though potentially to a lesser extent due to the added benefit of crop canopy closure. Despite this limitation, use of additional successful herbicide applications and layered residuals have been shown previously to improve weed control in cotton (Price et al. Reference Price, Koger, Wilcut, Miller and van Santen2008).

The findings from these studies indicate that the integration of IFT into cotton herbicide programs provide comparable control of weeds such as Palmer amaranth without sacrificing yield or fiber quality in IFT-tolerant cotton systems. The addition of IFT will provide an additional herbicide site of action for cotton production acres while planted to cotton, which will be paramount for combating further herbicide resistance evolution. Even with HPPD-inhibiting herbicide resistance already present in Arkansas (Heap Reference Heap2021) with resistance to mesotrione, combinations of HPPD-inhibiting herbicides such as IFT with PSII inhibiting herbicides, such as fluometuron in cotton, have been shown to overcome resistance to either HPPD- or PSII-inhibiting herbicides by Palmer amaranth (Chahal and Jhala Reference Chahal and Jhala2018). It should be noted that successful, season-long weed control was attained only through the use of complete herbicide programs that used multiple effective sights of action, and these strategies, as well as the incorporation of holistic integrated weed management strategies, will need to be implemented to aid in the longevity of these new technologies (Norsworthy et al. Reference Norsworthy, Ward, Shaw, Llewellyn, Nichols, Webster, Bradley, Frisvold, Powles, Burgos, Witt and Barrett2012).

Acknowledgments

Funding for this research was provided by BASF. No conflicts of interest have been declared.

Footnotes

Associate Editor: Lawrence E. Steckel, University of Tennessee

References

Anonymous (2018) Warrant Herbicide Label. St. Louis, MO: Monsanto Company. https://s3-us-west-1.amazonaws.com/agrian-cg-fs1-production/pdfs/Warrant_Herbicide1c_Label.pdf. Accessed: February 17, 2021Google Scholar
Anonymous (2019) Brake Herbicide Label. Carmel, IN: SePRO Corporation. https://www.sepro.com/Documents/Brake-Herbicide_Label.pdf. Accessed: February 17, 2021Google Scholar
Anonymous (2020) Dual II Magnum Herbicide. Greensboro, NC: Syngenta Crop Protection LLC. https://www.syngenta-us.com/current-label/dual_ii_magnum. Accessed: February 17, 2021Google Scholar
Anonymous (2021) Direx 4L Herbicide Label. Raleigh, NC: ADAMA. https://assets.greenbook.net/L119813.pdf. Accessed: February 17, 2021Google Scholar
Barber, L, Boyd, J, Norsworthy, J, Burgos, N, Bertucci, M, Selden, G (2021) MP44: Recommended Chemicals for weed and brush control. Little Rock: University of Arkansas System Division of Agriculture, Cooperative Extension Service Google Scholar
Brabham, C, Norsworthy, JK, Houston, MM, Varanasi, VK, Barber, T (2019) Confirmation of S-metolachlor resistance in Palmer amaranth (Amaranthus palmeri). Weed Technol 33:720726 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brunner, E, Bathke, AC, Konietschke, F (2019) Designs with three and more factors. Pages 333–355 in Rank and pseudo-rank procedures for independent observations in factorial designs. New York: Springer CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brunner, E, Dette, H, Munk, A (1997) Box-type approximations in nonparametric factorial designs. J Am Stat Assoc 92:14941502 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Burgos, NR, Kuk, YI, Talbert, RE (2001) Amaranthus palmeri resistance and differential tolerance of Amaranthus palmeri and Amaranthus hybridus to ALS-inhibitor herbicides. Pest Manag Sci 57:449457 CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Chahal, PS, Jugulam, M, Jhala, AJ (2019) Basis of atrazine and mesotrione synergism for controlling atrazine- and HPPD inhibitor-resistant Palmer amaranth. Agron J 111:32653273 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chahal, PS, Jhala, AJ (2018) Interaction of PS II- and HPPD-inhibiting herbicides for control of Palmer amaranth resistant to both herbicide sites of action. Agron J 110:24962506 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Culpepper, AS, York, AC, Robert, P, Whitaker, JR (2009) Weed control and crop response to glufosinate applied to “PHY 485 WRF” cotton. Weed Technol 23:356362 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
DeVore, JD, Norsworthy, JK, Brye, KR (2012) Influence of deep tillage and a rye cover crop on glyphosate-resistant Palmer amaranth (Amaranthus palmeri) emergence in cotton. Weed Technol 26:832838 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Giraudoux, P, Antonietti, JP, Beale, C, Pleydell, D, Treglia, M (2018) pgirmess: spatial analysis and data mining for field ecologists. https://cran.r-project.org/web/packages/pgirmess/index.html. Accessed: February 1, 2021Google Scholar
Gossett, BJ, Murdock, EC, Toler, JE (1992) Resistance of Palmer amaranth (Amaranthus palmeri) to the dinitroaniline herbicides. Weed Technol 6:587591 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Heap, I (2021) International Survey of Herbicide Resistant Weeds. http://www.weedscience.org/Summary/Species.aspx?WeedID=14. Accessed: January 22, 2021Google Scholar
Jhala, AJ, Sandell, LD, Rana, N, Kruger, GR, Knezevic, SZ (2014) Confirmation and control of triazine and 4-hydroxyphenylpyruvate dioxygenate-inhibiting herbicide resistant Palmer amaranth (Amaranthus palmeri) in Nebraska. Weed Technol 28:2838 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jordan, DL, Frans, RE, McClelland, MR (1993) Cotton (Gossypium hirsutum) response to DPX-PE350 applied postemergence. Weed Technol 7:159162 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kniss, AR, Streibig, JC (2018) Statistical analysis of agricultural experiments using R. https://Rstats4ag.org. Accessed: February 1, 2021Google Scholar
Kohrt, JR, Sprague, CL (2017) Herbicide management strategies in field corn for a three-way herbicide-resistant Palmer amaranth (Amaranthus palmeri) population. Weed Technol 31:364372 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kothari, N, Hinze, L, Dever, J, Hague, S (2017) Boll sampling protocols and their impact on measurements of cotton fiber quality. Ind Crops Prod 109:248254 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kruskal, WH, Wallis, WA (1952) Use of ranks in one-criterion variance analysis. J Am Stat Assoc 47:583621 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Meyer, CJ, Norsworthy, JK, Young, BG, Steckel, LE, Bradley, KW, Johnson, WG, Loux, MM, Davis, VM, Kruger, GR, Bararpour, MT, Ikley, JT, Spaunhorst, DJ, Butts, TR (2016) Early-season Palmer amaranth and waterhemp control from preemergence programs utilizing 4-hydroxyphenylpyruvate dioxygenase-inhibiting and auxinic herbicides in soybean. Weed Technol 30:6775 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Morgan, GD, Bautmann, PA, Chandler, JM (2001) Competetive impact of Palmer amaranth (Amaranthus palmeri) on cotton. Weed Technol 15:408412 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Norsworthy, JK, Griffith, GM, Scott, RC, Smith, KL, Oliver, LR (2008) Confirmation and control of glyphosate-resistant Palmer amaranth (Amaranthus palmeri) in Arkansas. Weed Technol 22:108113 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Norsworthy, JK, Ward, SM, Shaw, DR, Llewellyn, R, Nichols, RL, Webster, TM, Bradley, KW, Frisvold, G, Powles, SB, Burgos, NR, Witt, W, Barrett, M (2012) Reducing the risks of herbicide resistance: best management practices and recommendations. Weed Sci 60 (SI 1):3162 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pallett, KE, Little, JP, Sheekey, M, Veerasekaran, P (1998) The mode of action of isoxaflutole: I. physiological effects, metabolism, and selectivity. Pestic Biochem Physiol 62:113124 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Price, AJ, Koger, CH, Wilcut, JW, Miller, D, van Santen, E (2008) Efficacy of residual and non-residual herbicides used in cotton production systems when applied with glyphosate, glufosinate, or MSMA. Weed Technol 22:459466 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Riar, DS, Norsworthy, JK, Steckel, LE, Stephenson, DO, Eubank, TW, Scott, RC (2013) Assessment of weed management practices and problem weeds in the midsouth United States-soybean: a consultant’s perspective. Weed Technol 27:612622 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Robertson, B, Barber, T, Lorenz, G (2021) 2021 Arkansas Cotton Quick Facts. University of Arkansas System Division of Agriculture Research and Extension. https://www.uaex.edu/farm-ranch/crops-commercial-horticulture/verification/2021_Arkansas_Cotton_Quick_Facts_final_accessible.pdf. Accessed: October 5, 2021Google Scholar
Rowland, MW, Murray, DS, Verhalen, LM (1999) Full-season palmer amaranth (Amaranthus palmeri) interference with cotton (Gossypium hirsutum). Weed Sci 47:305309 Google Scholar
Sauer, JD (1972) The dioecious amaranths: a new species name and major range extensions. Madrono 21:426434 Google Scholar
Shah, DA, Madden, LV (2004) Nonparametric analysis of ordinal data in designed factorial experiments. Phytopathology 94:3342 CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Shyam, C, Borgato, EA, Peterson, DE, Dille, JA, Jugulam, M (2021) Predominance of metabolic resistance in a six-way-resistant Palmer amaranth (Amaranthus palmeri) population. Front Plant Sci 11:614618 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Smith, DT, Baker, RV, Steele, GL (2000) Palmer amaranth (Amaranthus palmeri) impacts on yield, harvesting, and ginning in dryland cotton (Gossypium hirsutum). Weed Technol 14:122126 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Steckel, LE (2020) Dicamba-resistant Palmer amaranth in Tennessee: stewardship even more important. Knoxville: The University of Tennessee Institute of Agriculture. https://news.utcrops.com/2020/07/dicamba-resistant-palmer-amaranth-in-tennessee-stewardship-even-more-important/. Accessed: February 1, 2021Google Scholar
Stephenson, DO, Bond, JA (2012) Evaluation of thiencarbazone-methyl and isoxaflutole-based herbicide programs in corn. Weed Technol 26:3742 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
[USDA-NRCS] U.S. Department of Agriculture–Natural Resources Conservation Service (2020) Web Soil Survey. http://websoilsurvey.sc.egov.usda.gov/. Accessed: February 1, 2021Google Scholar
Van Wychen, L (2019) 2019 Survey of the most common and troublesome weeds in broadleaf crops, fruits & vegetables in the United States and Canada. Weed Science Society of America National Weed Survey Dataset. http://wssa.net/wp-content/uploads/2016_Weed_Survey_Final.xlsx. Accessed: February 7, 2020Google Scholar
Varanasi, VK, Brabham, C, Norsworthy, JK (2018) Confirmation and characterization of non-target site resistance to fomesafen in Palmer amaranth. Weed Sci 66:702709 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Figure 0

Table 1. Herbicide information for all products used in both experiments.

Figure 1

Table 2. Treatment structure for both experiments in 2019 and 2020.a

Figure 2

Table 3. P-values for cotton crop safety by treatment and year for cotton injury.a,b

Figure 3

Table 4. P-values for cotton fiber quality by treatment and year.a

Figure 4

Table 5. Injury to isoxaflutole-tolerant cotton at 14 d after preemergence applications, averaged over 2019 and 2020 and injury 14 days after mid-POST application in 2019.a,b

Figure 5

Table 6. Cotton injury and quality factors in 2019 and 2020.a,b

Figure 6

Figure 1. Rainfall and temperature data over the growing season at the Lon Mann Cotton Research Center near Marianna, AR in 2019 (A) and 2020 (B).

Figure 7

Table 7. P-values for Palmer amaranth and entireleaf morningglory control in 2019 and 2020a,b

Figure 8

Table 8. Palmer amaranth and entireleaf morningglory control averaged over treatment.a,b

Figure 9

Table 9. P-values for weed groundcover, johnsongrass control, and broadleaf signalgrass control.a,b

Figure 10

Table 10. Observed control of Palmer amaranth and entireleaf morningglory averaged over 2019 and 2020.a,b

Figure 11

Table 11. Results of contrast analyses comparing the use of residuals or no residual in the mid-postemergence applications and the presence or absence of layby applications for Palmer amaranth, entireleaf morningglory, broadleaf signalgrass, and johnsongrass control averaged over year.a,b,c

Figure 12

Table 12. Visible estimates of broadleaf signalgrass control, johnsonsgrass control, and groundcover.a,b