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Effects of tillage, application time and rate on metribuzin dissipation
Authors:B A SORENSON  P J SHEA  F W ROETH
Institution:Department of Agronomy, University of Nebraska, Lincoln, NE 68583-0915;South Central Research and Extension Center, University of Nebraska, Clay Center, NE, USA
Abstract:Metribuzin efficacy and dissipation were determined in two silty clay loam soils following preplant (PP), pre-emergence (PRE) and split (PP+PRE) application to tilled and no-till soybeans in rotation with corn at Clay Center and Lincoln, Nebraska. A similar experiment was conducted in tilled and no-till soybeans in rotation with wheat at Lincoln. Corn and wheat residue in no-till plots reduced the amount of metribuzin that reached the soil by approximately 54 and 89%, respectively. No differences in weed control or soybean yield were observed between tillage treatments or time of metribuzin application in the corn-soybean rotation. However, both weed control and yield were reduced in the wheat-soybean rotation. Most of the metribuzin remained at the 0–5 cm depth, and dissipation was exponential. The mean metribuzin half-life at the 0–5 cm depth across locations, tillage treatments, application time and rates was 11 days. The metribuzin half-life was 4–19 days following PP application and 3–17 days following PRE application. The metribuzin concentration did not exceed 65 μg kg?1 at the 5–10 cm or 10–20 cm depths in any treatment, indicating that little metribuzin had leached from the surface soil after PP or PRE application. The finding of a higher metribuzin concentration at 5-20 cm depth in tilled plots than in no-till could be attributed to higher initial soil concentrations in the absence of crop residue.
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