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31 January 2020 Off-target movement assessment of dicamba in North America
Nader Soltani, Maxwel C. Oliveira, Guilherme S. Alves, Rodrigo Werle, Jason K. Norsworthy, Christy L. Sprague, Bryan G. Young, Daniel B. Reynolds, Ashli Brown, Peter H. Sikkema
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Abstract

Six experiments were conducted in 2018 on field sites located in Arkansas, Indiana, Michigan, Nebraska, Ontario, and Wisconsin to evaluate the off-target movement (OTM) of dicamba under field-scale conditions. The highest estimated percentages of dicamba injury in non–dicamba-resistant (DR) soybean were 55%, 44%, 39%, 67%, 15%, and 44% injury for noncovered areas and 55%, 5%, 13%, 42%, 0%, and 41% injury for covered areas during dicamba application in Arkansas, Indiana, Michigan, Nebraska, Ontario, and Wisconsin, respectively. The level of injury generally decreased as the downwind distance increased under covered and noncovered areas at all sites. There was an estimated 10% injury in non-DR soybean at 113, 8, 11, 8, and 8 m; and estimated 1% injury at 293, 28, 71, 15, and 19 m from the edge of treated fields downwind when plants were not covered during dicamba application in Arkansas, Indiana, Michigan, Ontario, and Wisconsin, respectively. Assessment of filter-paper collectors placed from 4 to 137 m downwind from the edge of the sprayed area suggested the dicamba deposition reduced exponentially with distance. The greatest injury to non-DR soybean from dicamba OTM occurred at Nebraska and Arkansas (as far as 250 m). Non-DR soybean injury was greatest adjacent to the dicamba sprayed area, but injury decreased with no injury beyond 20 m downwind or in any other direction from the dicamba sprayed area in Indiana, Michigan, Ontario, and Wisconsin. The presence of soybean injury under covered and noncovered areas during the spray period for primary drift suggests that secondary movement of dicamba was evident at five sites. Additional research is needed to determine the exact forms of secondary movement of dicamba under different environmental conditions.

Nomenclature: Dicamba; soybean, Glycine max (L.) Merr

© Weed Science Society of America, 2020. This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Nader Soltani, Maxwel C. Oliveira, Guilherme S. Alves, Rodrigo Werle, Jason K. Norsworthy, Christy L. Sprague, Bryan G. Young, Daniel B. Reynolds, Ashli Brown, and Peter H. Sikkema "Off-target movement assessment of dicamba in North America," Weed Technology 34(3), 318-330, (31 January 2020). https://doi.org/10.1017/wet.2020.17
Received: 3 October 2019; Accepted: 16 January 2020; Published: 31 January 2020
KEYWORDS
Crop injury
dicamba-resistant soybean
primary drift
secondary drift
sensitivity
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