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HERO ID
5204241
Reference Type
Journal Article
Title
Weed and insect control affected by mixing insecticides with glyphosate in cotton
Author(s)
Ma Xiao-yan; Wu Han-wen; Jiang Wei-li; Ma Ya-jie; Ma Yan
Year
2016
Journal
Journal of Integrative Agriculture
ISSN:
2095-3119
Volume
15
Issue
2
Page Numbers
373-380
DOI
10.1016/S2095-3119(15)61188-1
Web of Science Id
WOS:000369551400013
Abstract
Field studies were conducted in 2012 and 2013 to evaluate weed and insect control efficacy with glyphosate at 1230 g ai (active ingredient) ha(-1) and the insecticides acephate (728 g ai ha(-1)), carbosulfan (135 g ai ha(-1)), endosulfan (683 g ai ha(-1)), imidacloprid (32 g ai ha(-1)), or lambda-cyhalothrin (23 g ai ha(-1)), as well as glyphosate tank-mixed with these insecticides. Four of the most common weeds in cotton, common purslane, false daisy, goosegrass, and lambsquarters, were manually sown in the cotton field and treated with glyphosate alone or in combination with insecticides. Glyphosate efficacy, based on visual estimates of control and weed fresh weight at 21 d after treatment (DAT), was unaffected by the addition of insecticides. Four weeds were controlled by 93-97% and 86-100% (visual rating) and reduced weed fresh biomass by 98-99% and 96-100% with glyphosate alone and its combination with insecticides, respectively. Addition of glyphosate to acephate improved cotton aphid control compared with acephate alone. However, addition of glyphosate to carbosulfan, endosulfan, imidacloprid, or lambda-cyhalothrin did not affect the aphid control when compared with the insecticide alone treatments. These results indicate that cotton producers could potentially integrate weed and insect management strategies by choosing suitable insecticide mixing partners with glyphosate, thereby reducing the application costs without sacrificing the efficacy of the glyphosate or the insecticides.
Keywords
aphid; control efficacy; glyphosate-resistant cotton; herbicide-insecticide combinations; weed
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