Precautions with late-season herbicide applications
This article was originally published on July 12, 2012 and expired on September 5, 2012. It is provided here for archival purposes and may contain dated information.
The adverse environmental conditions common across much of Illinois are
challenging the performance of many foliar-applied soybean herbicides.
Weeds
that survive an initial herbicide application are often resprayed later in the
season. However, according to University of Illinois associate professor of
weed science Aaron Hager, the likelihood of controlling larger,
moisture-stressed weeds continues to decline.
Moreover,
herbicides applied late in the season are more likely to persist long enough to
injure sensitive rotational crops. Nearly all herbicide labels (soil-applied or
postemergence) specify the interval between herbicide application and planting
a rotational crop. Some of these restrictions are based solely on time, while
others take into account factors such as soil pH and the amount of
precipitation received after herbicide application when determining interval
length.
"Soil moisture is often the most critical factor governing
the efficacy and persistence of soil-residual herbicides," Hager said. "Many
herbicides are degraded in soil by the activity of soil microorganisms, and
populations of these microorganisms can be greatly depressed when soil moisture
is limited."
Dry soils can also enhance herbicide adsorption to soil
colloids, thus rendering the herbicide unavailable for plant uptake and
degradation by soil microbial populations. Some herbicide rotational intervals
are increased if a specified amount of precipitation is not received by a
certain calendar date.
The
intervals are established to prevent herbicide residues from reaching levels
that will adversely affect the rotational crop. Respecting these intervals
becomes particularly important with late-season herbicide applications and when
soil moisture is limited.
"Please
keep in mind that the labels of almost all postemergence soybean herbicides
indicate a preharvest interval or a soybean developmental stage beyond which
applications cannot be made," said Hager.
Labels
of some products may indicate both a developmental stage (before soybean bloom,
for example) and a preharvest interval. Preharvest intervals indicate the
amount of time that must elapse between the herbicide application and crop
harvest.
Failure
to observe the preharvest interval may result in herbicide residue levels in
the harvested portion of the crop in excess of established limits. Moreover,
labels on many postemergence soybean herbicides specify that foraging of, or
grazing livestock on, treated soybean is not allowed.
Source: Aaron Hager, Extension Specialist, Weed Science/IPM, hager@illinois.edu
Pull date: September 5, 2012
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