Frontiers in Environmental Science (Mar 2018)

Post-Emergence Herbicidal Activity of Nanoatrazine Against Susceptible Weeds

  • Gustavo F. M. Sousa,
  • Diego G. Gomes,
  • Estefânia V. R. Campos,
  • Jhones L. Oliveira,
  • Leonardo F. Fraceto,
  • Renata Stolf-Moreira,
  • Halley C. Oliveira

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fenvs.2018.00012
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6

Abstract

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Poly(ε-caprolactone) (PCL) nanocapsules have been previously developed as a carrier system for atrazine. However, the efficacy of this nanoformulation against weeds commonly found in crop cultures has not been tested yet. Here, we evaluated the post-emergence herbicidal activity of PCL nanocapsules containing atrazine against Amaranthus viridis (slender amaranth) and Bidens pilosa (hairy beggarticks), in comparison with a commercial formulation of atrazine. For both species, treatment with atrazine-loaded nanocapsules (at 2,000 g ha−1) led to a greater decrease in the photosystem II activity (above 50% inhibition relative to the control) than the commercial atrazine formulation at the same concentration (around 40% inhibition). The growth of A. viridis plants was equally reduced by nanoatrazine and commercial formulation (above 64% for root and 75% for shoot). In the case of B. pilosa, atrazine-loaded nanocapsules decreased more effectively the root and shoot growth than the commercial formulation, leading to a loss of plant biomass. Moreover, for both species, the use of 10-fold diluted atrazine-loaded PCL nanocapsules (200 g ha−1) resulted in the same inhibitory effect in root and shoot growth as the commercial formulation at the standard atrazine dose. These results suggest that the utilization of atrazine-containing PCL nanocapsules potentiated the post-emergence control of A. viridis and B. pilosa by the herbicide. Thus, this nanoformulation emerges as an efficient alternative for weed control.

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