dissipation of soil-applied sugarcane herbicides in organic soils calvin odero certified crop...
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Dissipation of soil-applied sugarcane herbicides in
organic soils
Calvin Odero
Certified Crop Adviser CEU Session
Outline
• Everglades Agricultural Area (EAA)– Organic soils
• Sugarcane– Taxonomy, crop cycle
• Weeds associated with sugarcane– Broadleaf, grass, and grass-like weeds
• Weed management in sugarcane– Preemergence and postemergence herbicides
• Soil herbicide dissipation– Terminologies (degradation, dissipation, persistence)– Factors affecting herbicides dissipation
• Soil, climatic, and herbicide properties
• Soil-applied herbicides in sugarcane– Pendimethalin, atrazine, metribuzin
• Field dissipation of pendimethalin in organic soils of the EAA• Field dissipation of atrazine and metribuzin in organic soils of the EAA
Everglades Agricultural Area (EAA)
• 700,000 acres of land– Major crop - sugarcane– Other crops - winter vegetables, rice,
sod– Dominated by organic (muck) soils
• Sugarcane acreage– 325,000 acres on organic soils
(Histosols)– 92,000 acres on mineral (sandy) soils
(Spodosols & Entisols)
Source: http://www.doi.gov/pmb/oepc/wetlands2/v2ch7.cfm
Organic soils
• Formed several thousands of years – Organic matter production
exceeded decomposition– Flooded sawgrass prairies
south of Lake Okeechobee
• High soil organic matter content (up to 85%)
• Soil depth– 6 inches to over 4 feet
Organic soil subsidence
• Drainage of soils resulted in – Oxidation & mineralization of large
quantities of organic N– Microbial oxidation account for 50 to 75%
of the subsidence
• Subsidence rates– Estimated using transect lines from the
bedrock 1924 – 1967: 1.12 inches/year 1967 – 2009: 0.55 inches/year
• Reasons for decline– Maintenance of high water table, BMPs– Increasing recalcitrate of remaining soil
organic matter– Increased mineral content (CaCO3, sand,
clay)
9 foot post driven into the bedrock at the EREC in 1924
Sugarcane
• Giant grass• Family: Poaceae• Tribe: Adropogoneae • Saccharum officinarum L.
– ‘Noble cane’ with long, thick, heavy, juicy & sweet stalks
• Other species– S. barberi– S. robustum– S. sinese– S. spontaneum
• Commercial clones are typically 3-part hybrids
Sugarcane
• Perennial crop, harvested annually • Planting season
– Mid-October to end-December• First year crop is plant cane, successive years are ratoon or
stubble crops • Harvest season
– Mid-October to March/April• Typically replanted every 3 to 5 years• Planting
• Following fallow period after final ratoon‒ Crop rotation (winter vegetables, rice), flooding, fallow
• Successive‒ Replanting several weeks after the final ratoon
Common broadleaf weeds in sugarcane
• Common lambsquarters*
• Spiny amaranth*
• Common ragweed*
• Common purslane• Alligatorweed• American
blacknightshade
Common lambsquarters
Spiny amaranth
Common grass and grass-like weeds in sugarcane
• Fall panicum*
• Guineagrass• Goosegrass• Crowfoot grass• Crabgrasses• Bermudagrass*
• Almum sorghum• Elephantgrass• Yellow nutsedge*
• Purple nutsedge
Fall panicum
Bermudagrass
Weed management in sugarcane
• Major cost associated with sugarcane production• Weed management methods
– Mechanical cultivation, herbicides, cultural (crop rotation) • Herbicides are most commonly used
Preemergence• Atrazine
• Metribuzin
• Pendimethalin
Postemergence• 2,4-D• Dicamba• Ametryn• Atrazine• Metribuzin• Mesotrione• Asulam• Trifloxysulfuron• Halosulfuron
Mechanical cultivation
Crop rotation (Sweet corn)
• Glyphosate
Terminologies
• Several related terms with respect to the residence time a herbicide remains in a given portion of the soil matrix
• Degradation: substantive change in the molecular makeup of a given herbicide, with a component of the parent molecule removed by some process to form a metabolite or metabolites
• Dissipation: sum of all possible outcomes of the parent herbicide
– Non-alteration of chemical form of the herbicide• Volatilization, movement off-site, leaching, surface
runoff– Chemical alteration of the chemical form of the
herbicide• Chemical or microbial degradation
• Persistence: length of time a herbicide remains active in the soil
– Can be considered a negative connotation• Damages to rotational crops, contamination of
surface water and groundwater– Allow for residual weed control
• Half-life: amount of time required for dissipation of one half of the original amount of herbicide applied
Source: http://extension.psu.edu/pests/weeds/control/persistance-of-herbicides-in-soil
Herbicide families with potentially persistent members TRIAZINES PHENYLUREAS SULFONYLUREAS Atrazine Hexazinone Simazine Prometon
Diuron Tebuthiuron
Chlorimuron Chlorsulfuron Metsulfuron Nicosulfuron Primisulfuron Profulfron Sulfometuron
DINITROANILINES URACILS Pendimethalin Trifluralin Benefin Oryzalin Prodiamine
Terbacil Bromacil
OTHERS IMIDAZOLINONES PLANT GROWTH REGULATORS Clomazone Bensulide Tebuthiuron Sodium borates
Imazapyr Imazaquin Imazethapyr
Clopyralid Picloram Triclopyr
Herbicide families with their persistent members
• Herbicides vary in their potential to persist in soil
Soil factors affecting dissipation
• Physical– Composition
• Relative amounts of sand, silt, clay, organic matter – Herbicidal activity is affected by
• Adsorption, leaching, volatilization
• Chemistry– Soil pH, CEC, nutrient status
• Triazines and sulfonylureas
• Microbial activity– Microbes (bacteria, fungi) and their relative numbers– Affected by
• Moisture, pH, oxygen, mineral nutrient supply
Climatic factors affecting dissipation
• Moisture and temperature– Degradation rates affected by both factors
• Chemical and microbial decomposition increase with higher temperatures and moisture levels
• Sunlight– Photodecomposition
• Dinitroanilines (pendimethalin, trifluralin)
Herbicide properties affecting dissipation
• Chemical properties– Water solubility, vapor pressure
• Susceptibility to chemical or microbial alteration or degradation
• Leaching depends on – Water solubility of the herbicide– Herbicide-soil binding properties– Soil physical characteristics– Rainfall frequency and intensity– Herbicide concentration– Time of herbicide application
• Volatilization– Higher vapor pressure
• Thiocarbamates, dinitroanilines
• Herbicide’s chemical structure– Dictates degradation in soil by microbial or chemical means
Pendimethalin
• Dinitroaniline herbicide– PRE control of annual grasses, certain broadleaf weeds
• Chemical and physical properties– Crystalline orange-yellow solid with faint nutty odor– Low water solubility (0.275 mg L−1)– Low mobility and leaching potential – Strong adsorption to soil colloids and OM (Koc = 17,200 L
kg−1) – Low volatility (vapor pressure = 1.25 × 10−3 Pa)
• Characteristics are attributed to – High potential for hydrogen bonding in particular to
organic, lipophilic and proteinaceous substances • Use rate increases with increasing soil OM
Pendimethalin
• Degraded primarily by soil microorganisms • Undergoes photodecomposition • Persistence influenced by edaphic and climatic
conditions • Degradation is faster under anaerobic, warm and
moist conditions• Half-life
– 42 to 101 days under laboratory conditions– 44 days in the field
• Depends on soil temperature and moisture
• Bioavailability decreases with increase in soil organic matter content
Field dissipation of pendimethalin
• Location– Belle Glade, FL in 2011 and 2012– Dania muck soil, pH of 7.1 and 6.6, OM of 68.1 and 73.9%
• Design: RCBD, 3 to 4 replications• Pendimethalin treatments
– Oil-based formulation (Prowl 3.3 EC)– Water-based formulation (Prowl H2O)
• 2, 4, and 8 kg ha−1 plus a nontreated control
• Soil sampling– 7, 14, 21, 28, 35, 42, 49, and 56 days after treatment– Four soil cores, 0 to 10 cm in depth
• Pendimethalin in soil was determined using a GC-MS
Environmental conditions at herbicide application Environmental parameter
Year 2011 2012
Soil temperature 17 C 19 C Air temperature 21 C 23 C Total solar radiation 208 langleys day-1 288 langleys day-1 Rainfall at herbicide application 20 mm 0 mm Total rainfall 116 mm 68 mm
Odero and Shaner, Weed Technology 28:82-88
Summary
• Rate of dissipation of oil- and water-based pendimethalin formulations was very similar
• Initial amount of pendimethalin in the soil was higher with the water-based compared to the oil-based formulation– Lower volatility of the water-based
• Lower half-life values for both pendimethalin formulations under field conditions – Climatic and edaphic conditions– Absence of incorporation following application
ConclusionGrowers on organic soils will not observe long residual activity
of pendimethalin irrespective of the formulation when applied under dry soil conditions with no incorporation
Triazine herbicides
• Important in weed management in sugarcane • Atrazine (s-triazine) is the most widely used
– >70% of the sugarcane acreage in the US– Offers consistent performance, low cost, residual weed control, flexibility
in time and method of application, compatibility with other herbicides, crop safety
• Metribuzin (asymmetrical triazine) is also used in sugarcane • Both used for PRE or early POST for control of broadleaf weeds
and certain grasses• Efficacious residual weed control depends on their persistence• Both have half-lives of up to 60 days under field conditions • Relatively low adsorption on most soils • Sugarcane growers have observed reduced residual activity of
atrazine on organic soils of the EAA
Atrazine
• Persistence in soil attributed to the halogen, methylthiother, and N-alkyl substituents on the s-triazine ring which impeded microbial degradation but
• Adaptation of bacterial communities able to utilize atrazine as a C and N source has occurred– Soils with repeated atrazine use– Enhanced degradation
• Pseudomonas sp. strain ADP and Nocardioides sp. strain C190 able to metabolize and rapidly degrade atrazine have been isolated
• Enhanced atrazine degradation has been reported – Colorado, Mississippi, Ohio, Tennessee– Australia, Canada, Europe, South America
• Fields with a history of repeated atrazine use
Atrazine and metribuzin
• Enhanced atrazine degradation reported across the full range of sugarcane production areas – Using laboratory incubation dissipation studies – Atrazine-adapted soils were cross-adapted with
ametryn (chloro-s-triazine) but not with metribuzin
• Lack of cross-adaptation of atrazine and metribuzin shows that metribuzin could be a viable alternative for use in sugarcane soils with enhanced atrazine degradation
Field dissipation of triazine herbicides
• Location– Belle Glade, FL in 2011 and 2012– Dania muck soil, pH of 7.1 and 6.6, OM of 68.1 and 73.9%
• Design: RCBD, 3 to 4 replications• Herbicide treatments
– Atrazine - 2.24, 4.48, and 8.96 kg ha-1 – Metribuzin - 0.56, 1.12, and 2.24 kg ha-1
• Soil sampling– 7, 14, 21, 28, 35, 42, 49, and 56 days after treatment– Four soil cores, 0 to 10 cm in depth
• Herbicide extraction– Toluene (total amount of herbicide in the soil)– Water (readily bioavailable fraction in the soil)
Summary
• Atrazine dissipated more rapidly than metribuzin under field conditions on organic soils
• Atrazine half-life values in these s-triazine-adapted organic sugarcane soils were up to 60-fold lower than previous estimates of 60 days under field conditions depending on atrazine rate and use history
• This implies that residual weed control by PRE atrazine in sugarcane grown in the EAA is up to 60-fold lower in these s-triazine-adapted soils
• The non-symmetrical triazine herbicide metribuzin had relatively longer half-life values under field conditions at the labeled use rate for sugarcane in the EAA compared to atrazine, implying that metribuzin is the better alternative for PRE weed control in sugarcane grown on organic soils of the EAA exhibiting enhanced atrazine degradation
Take home message
• Dissipation of pendimethalin on organic soils is influenced by climatic and edaphic conditions
• Enhanced atrazine degradation occurs on organic soils under field conditions, resulting in shorter residual atrazine activity
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