Agronomy (Nov 2023)
Experimental Study of Quizalofop-p-Ethyl Herbicide Drift Damage to Corn and the Safety Amount of Drift Deposition
Abstract
Under soybean–corn intercropping in China, quizalofop-p-ethyl is recommended as a herbicide for stem and leaf treatment after soybean seedling. Nonetheless, herbicide drift during spraying may lead to environmental contamination and damage to the corn plants. In order to clearly show the threshold of the drift deposition amount of quizalofop-p-ethyl that causes herbicide damage to corn, we used a bioassay spray tower to spray quizalofop-p-ethyl herbicide on corn in the laboratory and a boom sprayer to spray quizalofop-p-ethyl herbicide, which drifts to corn in the field, to study and evaluate the damage quizalofop-p-ethyl herbicide causes to corn under different spray volumes and drift deposition rates. The results showed that under a drift deposition rate of 1% of three spray volumes, the corn showed no symptoms of herbicide damage and their plant height was not inhibited 14 days after spray; under a spray volume of 150 L/ha and a drift deposition rate of 5%, the corn showed symptoms of mild herbicide damage but their plant height was not inhibited 14 days after spray, while the corn showed symptoms of moderate herbicide damage and their plant height was slightly and moderately inhibited, respectively, under the spray volumes of 300 L/ha and 450 L/ha; under drift deposition rates of 10% and 30% of three spray volumes, half or more of the corn in each treatment withered and their plant height was severely inhibited or completely inhibited. Under the same spray volume, the symptoms of herbicide damage and the inhibition rate of plant height increased with the increase in the drift deposition rate; under the same drift deposition amount, the symptoms of herbicide damage and the inhibition rate of plant height increased with a decrease in the spray volume. The effect of the drift deposition rate on the symptoms of herbicide damage and plant height was extremely significant, but the spray volume was not significant. The drift deposition rates for 10% inhibition and no inhibition of corn plant height were 5.70% (R10) and 5.05% (R0) under spray volume of 150 L/ha, 4.56% (R10) and 1.23% (R0) under 300 L/ha, and 3.31% (R10) and 1.86% (R0) under 450 L/ha, respectively. When the herbicide was sprayed in the field using a soybean–corn-dedicated plant protection machine under the spray volume of 450 L/ha, the drift deposition rate ranged from 1.22% to 1.69%, and the corn did not produce symptoms of herbicide damage and plant height was not inhibited 14 days after the spray. In actual weeding operations, it is better to ensure that the drift deposition rate of quizalofop-p-ethyl is below R0 by setting reasonable operational parameters, using anti-drift nozzles or additives, and so on, and, at most, not more than R10. This study clarified the drift hazard of quizalofop-p-ethyl herbicide on corn and the safety value of the herbicide drift deposition amount, which provided data support for the standardized use of quizalofop-p-ethyl herbicide under soybean–corn intercropping and guidance for the safe production of field corn.
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