Redirigiendo al acceso original de articulo en 21 segundos...
Inicio  /  Agriculture  /  Vol: 12 Par: 9 (2022)  /  Artículo
ARTÍCULO
TITULO

Sensitivity and Recovery of Tomato Cultivars Following Simulated Drift of Dicamba or 2,4-D

Michele R. Warmund    
Mark R. Ellersieck and Reid J. Smeda    

Resumen

Tomato (Solanum lycopersicum L.) plants are commonly injured by the off-target movement of synthetic auxin herbicides. A greenhouse and a field trial were conducted to determine the relative tolerance of eight fresh market tomato cultivars to drift-simulating rates of dicamba or 2,4-D. Tomato cultivars included ?BHN 589?, ?Celebrity?, ?Florida 91?, ?Mountain Merit?, ?Primo Red?, ?Red Deuce?, ?Red Morning?, and ?Skyway?. Dicamba (3,6-dichloro-methoxybenzoic acid) and 2,4-D (2,4-dichlorophenoxyacetic acid) were applied at 2.8 g ae ha-1 and 5.3 g ae ha-1-D, respectively. By 14 weeks after treatment (WAT), herbicide-treated plants of each cultivar produced less total and marketable yield than their respective nontreated control in the greenhouse trial. For most cultivars, dicamba-treated plants had less marketable yield than 2,4-D-treated plants in the greenhouse. Herbicide treatments also reduced total and marketable yields of each cultivar when compared with their control in the field study at 14 WAT, except for ?Mountain Merit?. The severity of yield loss from herbicide treatments was cultivar-dependent. Field-grown ?Skyway? plants treated with dicamba produced the lowest marketable yield. In contrast, herbicide-treated plants of ?Florida 91? produced high marketable yields in the field, but ?Red Deuce? plants receiving 2,4-D were also highly productive. Herbicide residue in fruit sampled the third week of the harvest was nondetectable. Because the type of auxin herbicide drift is often unanticipated, ?Florida 91? may be the preferred cultivar for cultivation among those tested to maximize tomato production in the field.

 Artículos similares

       
 
Mariangela Diacono, Alessandro Persiani, Vincenzo Alfano, Antonio Monteforte and Francesco Montemurro    
In the Mediterranean area, using organic fertilizers is crucial to maintaining and increasing soil fertility and crop productivity since soil organic matter is being progressively depleted due to climate change effects. Therefore, the aim of this study w... ver más
Revista: Agriculture

 
Zeqiang Shao, Emmanuel R. Mwakidoshi, Esther M. Muindi, Rogério P. Soratto, Shivani Ranjan, Smruti Ranjan Padhan, Andrew W. Wamukota, Sumit Sow, Daniel O. Wasonga, Jamal Nasar, Mahmoud F. Seleiman and Harun I. Gitari    
Biogas bioslurry, which is normally a bio-digestion product from livestock refuse, can be utilized as an inorganic fertilizer, thus boosting not only soil fertility but also crop growth and yield. Its use can mitigate climate change by reducing methane g... ver más
Revista: Agronomy

 
Alessandra Moncada, Alessandro Miceli, Leo Sabatino, Giovanni Iapichino, Fabio D?Anna and Filippo Vetrano    
Molybdenum (Mo) is required in enzymes involved in a number of different metabolic processes, and is crucial for the survival of plants and animals. The influence of nutrient solutions containing four levels of molybdenum (0, 0.5, 1.5, and 3.0 µmol... ver más
Revista: Agronomy

 
Jorge D. Mantecón     Pág. 291 - 296
During the 2005 and 2006 growing seasons, two field trials were conducted at the INTA Balcarce Experimental Station (Argentina) to study the control of potato early blight (Alternaria solani). Uncut virus-free seed tubers of potato (Solanum tuberosum) ... ver más

 
V.P. CRAVERO, E.L. COINTRY, F.S. LOPEZ ANIDO, P.D. ASPRELLI, S.M. GARCIA     Pág. 51 - 56
Selectionresponse for productive characters in an open pollinated population of globe artichoke and clones derivedof both generations (C0 and C1) were evaluated. By means of multivariate analysis, elite plants of C0 wereselected and intercrossed to confo... ver más