Herbicide-resistant weeds from dryland agriculture in Argentina
We reviewed and performed a quantitative synthesis on herbicide-resistant weeds from rain-fed crops in Argentina. Twenty-four weed species distributed in the main extensive crops (soybean, maize, wheat, barley, oilseed rape, sunflower, chickpea and peanut) have evolved herbicide resistance. Of the total, 54% are grasses, 88% are annual species and 63% are cross-pollinated species. The most representative families were Poaceae with 54% resistant species, followed by Brassicaceae with 17%, and Asteraceae with 13%. Buenos Aires, Santa Fe and Córdoba were the provinces with the most documented cases of resistance (35%, 33% and 30%, respectively). The proportion of cases resistant to pre-emergence herbicides was 10%, whereas the proportion of cases resistant to post-emergence herbicides was 90%. Glyphosate was the herbicide with the highest incidence (92%) of resistance among weed species, followed by 29% of species that evolved resistance to ALS-inhibiting herbicides. Whereas resistance to auxin-like herbicides comprised 17% of the weed species, acetyl-CoA carboxylase (8%) and protoporphyrinogen oxidase (4%) inhibiting herbicides showed the least incidence of resistance evolution among weeds. The highest number of resistant species was identified in soybean (19), followed by maize (13), wheat/barley (10) and fallow (9). Weed species with a higher number of resistant populations to a higher number of herbicide mode of action were Amaranthus hybridus, A. palmeri, Lolium multiflorum and Raphanus sativus. The change in the production system since the mid-1990s, based on the use of herbicides (glyphosate mainly) to control weeds, is likely to account for the notorious increase in the average rate of evolution of herbicide-resistant weeds in Argentina.
Main Authors: | , , , , , , , , , , , , , |
---|---|
Format: | info:ar-repo/semantics/artículo biblioteca |
Language: | eng |
Published: |
Wiley
2024-01
|
Subjects: | Malezas, Herbicidas, Resistencia a los Herbicidas, Tierra Seca, Cultivo en Tierras Aridas, Argentina, Weeds, Herbicides, Resistance to Herbicides, Drylands, Dryland Farming, Agricultura de Secano, |
Online Access: | http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12123/16682 https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/wre.12613 https://doi.org/10.1111/wre.12613 |
Tags: |
Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
|
Summary: | We reviewed and performed a quantitative synthesis on herbicide-resistant weeds from rain-fed crops in Argentina. Twenty-four weed species distributed in the main extensive crops (soybean, maize, wheat, barley, oilseed rape, sunflower, chickpea and peanut) have evolved herbicide resistance. Of the total, 54% are grasses, 88% are annual species and 63% are cross-pollinated species. The most representative families were Poaceae with 54% resistant species, followed by Brassicaceae with 17%, and Asteraceae with 13%. Buenos Aires, Santa Fe and Córdoba were the provinces with the most documented cases of resistance (35%, 33% and 30%, respectively). The proportion of cases resistant to pre-emergence herbicides was 10%, whereas the proportion of cases resistant to post-emergence herbicides was 90%. Glyphosate was the herbicide with the highest incidence (92%) of resistance among weed species, followed by 29% of species that evolved resistance to ALS-inhibiting herbicides. Whereas resistance to auxin-like herbicides comprised 17% of the weed species, acetyl-CoA carboxylase (8%) and protoporphyrinogen oxidase (4%) inhibiting herbicides showed the least incidence of resistance evolution among weeds. The highest number of resistant species was identified in soybean (19), followed by maize (13), wheat/barley (10) and fallow (9). Weed species with a higher number of resistant populations to a higher number of herbicide mode of action were Amaranthus hybridus, A. palmeri, Lolium multiflorum and Raphanus sativus. The change in the production system since the mid-1990s, based on the use of herbicides (glyphosate mainly) to control weeds, is likely to account for the notorious increase in the average rate of evolution of herbicide-resistant weeds in Argentina. |
---|