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A Hot Afternoon Helps Weeds Resist Herbicide
ARS News Service - August 14, 2000
James R. Mahan, an Agricultural Research Service plant physiologist, and
Peter Dotray, a weed scientist at both Texas Tech and Texas A&M
universities in Lubbock, have found that when the herbicide Staple was
sprayed on pigweed on an afternoon when the temperature climbed above 93
degrees Fahrenheit, pigweed was barely affected. But just six feet away,
pigweed that was sprayed in the cooler morning was almost totally killed.
Staple is important in the Cotton Belt because it is the only herbicide
that farmers can spray over the top of cotton plants without harming
cotton.
Staple works by inhibiting a key plant enzyme. Mahan, Dotray and student
Ginger Light took a close look at the enzyme in test tubes and found it to
be most vulnerable to Staple at temperatures between 68 and 93 degrees
Fahrenheit-- its "Thermal Application Range."
Two years of field studies confirmed the lab results.
Mahan and Dotray recommend that farmers check the five-day forecast before
they spray Staple, to see which will be the coolest days. Farmers might
consider stopping the application before the day gets too warm. The
temperature at spraying time has the greatest effect on how well Staple
works, even though it takes the compound two weeks to kill weeds.
The experiment grew out of Mahan's discovery that key plant enzymes did
best within a narrow temperature range, causing plants to grow best at
those temperatures. The scientists expect several other weeds to have
similar thermal application ranges.
ARS is the chief research agency of the U.S. Department of Agriculture.
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