herbicide classification herbicides are classified according to timing and method of application and...
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Herbicide Classification
Herbicides are classified according to timing and method of application and chemistry.
Select a proper herbicide based on weed sensitivity as well as turfgrass tolerance, and also when and how you want to control the weed population.
Herbicide Classification
Foliar Absorbed Herbicides
Absorption of the active ingredient occurs in leaves.
Postemergence (POST) control only
Examples: glyphosate, 2,4-D, dicamba
Root Absorbed Herbicides
Absorption of the active ingredient occurs in roots.
Preemergence (PRE) or sometimes POST control
Examples: DNA crabgrass herbicides, atrazine
Herbicide Classification
Selective vs. Nonselective Herbicides
Selective herbicides control or suppress certain plants without negatively affecting the growth of other plants.
Selectivity may be due to differential absorption, translocation or physical (morphological) differences between species.
Herbicide Classification
Selective vs. Nonselective Herbicides
Selective herbicides may be detoxified in plants or just not converted into its active ingredients.
Examples: 2,4-D, mecoprop, dicamba control many broadleaf weeds but many turfgrasses are tolerant. PRE crabgrass herbicides are safe on many turfgrass species also.
Herbicide Classification
Selective vs. Nonselective Herbicides
Nonselective herbicides control plants regardless of species.
Examples: Glyphosate, glufosinate and paraquat are nonselective, foliar absorbed herbicides.
(Note – glyphosate is selective to certain turf species at low rates)
Herbicide Classification
Contact vs. Systemic Herbicides
Contact herbicides kill only the portion of green tissue that is contacted. Therefore, uniform spray coverage and particle size are essential for adequate control. (the entire plant must be sprayed)
Example: If a drop of paraquat (a nonselective, contact herbicide) were placed on a leaf tip, only the leaf tip would show injury symptoms.
Coverage with Granular vs Spray
Herbicide Classification
Contact vs. Systemic Herbicides
Contact herbicides do not kill perennial underground structures such as rhizomes, tubers and bulbs. Repeat applications to regrowth may eventually drain the plants’ underground resources, but it is better to try to control perennial weeds with systemic herbicides.
Use contact herbicides on annual weeds.
Herbicide Classification
Contact vs. Systemic Herbicides
Systemic herbicides are extensively translocated in a plant’s vascular system from point of absorption (leaf or root) to sites of action.
Example: If a drop of glyphosate (nonselective, systemic herbicide) were placed on a leaf tip, the entire plant would express injury symptoms due to translocation throughout the plant.
Herbicide Classification
Contact vs. Systemic Herbicides
Systemic herbicides are transported throughout the vascular system along with nutrients, water and organic materials necessary for plant growth.
Systemic herbicides require days to weeks for total control. (herbicide must travel throughout plant)
Systemic herbicides are more effective on perennial weeds than contact herbicides.
Herbicide Classification
Contact vs. Systemic Herbicides
Contact herbicide examples
MSMA for POST grass control
Bentazon for POST yellow nutsedge control
Paraquat for nonselective weed control
Herbicide Classification
Contact vs. Systemic Herbicides
Systemic herbicide examples
Glyphosate and glufosinate for nonselective weed control
2,4-D, mecoprop, dicamba for broadleaf weed control
Atrazine and simazine for annual bluegrass and broadleaf weed control
Herbicide Classification
Herbicide Timings
Herbicides can also be characterized as…
Preplant
Preemergence
Postemergence
Herbicide Classification
Herbicide Timings
Preplant herbicides (soil fumigants) are used in areas where a new turf stand is to be established. They are nonselective herbicides that kill desirable and undesirable plants!
Soil fumigants kill seeds.
Herbicide Classification
Herbicide Timings
Preplant herbicide examples include…
Methyl bromide (to be completely banned in 2005 because it is an ozone depleter)
Metam-sodium
Dazomet
Herbicide Classification
Herbicide Timings
PRE herbicides should be applied and activated prior to weed seed germination (either annual or perennial).
PRE herbicides form a thin barrier at or right below the soil surface. Emerging seedlings contact the treated zone, absorb the herbicide, then die.
PRE herbicides in turf are selective herbicides.
Weed Control With Preemergence Herbicides
Herbicides do not prevent weeds from germinating, they kill weeds as they grow through the herbicide treated zone.
Weed Control With Preemergence Herbicides
Large gaps in herbicide barriers result in weed escapes.
Herbicide Classification
Herbicide Timings
Weeds that have already emerged before application or activation are not affected by PRE herbicides because their primary growing point has escaped treatment.
PRE herbicides must be activated with approximately 0.5 inch of irrigation or rainfall.
Herbicide Classification
Herbicide Timings
PRE herbicides are relatively immobile, persistent and nonvolatile in soils. However, if left on the soil surface for an extended period of time without activation by water, these herbicides can volatilize or photodecompose.
PRE herbicides do not control perennial weeds emerging from vegetative structures.
Herbicide Classification
Herbicide Timings
PRE herbicides (especially crabgrass and goosegrass herbicides) are very effective as granular applications.
Particle sizes are uniform and small enough to ensure adequate soil coverage as long as your sprayer is properly calibrated and you’re applying the correct amount!!!
Herbicide Classification
Herbicide Timings
PRE herbicides DO NOT kill seeds. They don’t keep seeds from germinating. They kill seedlings as they germinate!
PRE herbicides kill weeds before they are visible. This lack of dead and dying weeds is more aesthetically pleasing.
Herbicide Classification
Herbicide TimingsPOST herbicides are applied directly to the
emerged weed, and are usually more effective on seedlings. Plants have two growth stages, vegetative (more easily killed when rapidly growing) and reproductive.
POST herbicides CAN be used on grass and broadleaf weeds, but MUST be used on sedge and kyllinga species, wild garlic, and many other perennial weeds. (Yellow nutsedge is an exception; metolachlor provides PRE control).
Herbicide Classification
Herbicide Timings
POST herbicides usually require multiple applications for adequate control. They can be foliar or root absorbed, selective or nonselective, contact or systemic.
Example: 2,4-D is a POST, selective, systemic, foliar absorbed herbicide.
Herbicide Classification
Herbicide Timings
POST herbicides are more effective when applied as liquid formulations rather than granular formulations (liquids stick to the weeds).
If granular products are chosen, apply to wet foliage so the herbicide will stick to the weeds and not roll onto the soil where they are ineffective.
Herbicide Classification
Herbicide Timings
POST herbicides are more effective when…
• Applied to actively growing weeds
• Temperature range from 60 to 85 degrees
• Good soil moisture
• Applied BEFORE mowing
• Mowing is delayed 1-2 days after application
Herbicide Classification
Herbicide Timings
POST herbicides must penetrate a waxy leaf cuticle to get inside of the plant. When plants are actively growing, the cuticle is thinner allowing for easier penetration.
When plants are drought-stressed, the cuticle becomes thicker to conserve plant moisture and herbicide penetration is more difficult.
Herbicide Classification
Herbicide Timings
POST herbicides usually should be avoided when temperatures exceed 90 degrees. The weeds could be drought-stressed and also the herbicide could become volatile and drift to nontargeted sensitive plants.
Example: 2,4-D injures tomatoes, cotton, tobacco.
Herbicide Classification
Herbicide Timings
Delay mowing for several days prior to a POST application to allow for more available foliage for herbicide absorption and to ensure that the weeds are actively growing.
Delay mowing for several days after a POST application to allow for herbicide translocation throughout the plant.
Herbicide Classification
Herbicide Timings
Do not apply POST herbicides in the rain or irrigate immediately after application. Depending on the individual label, herbicides can be rain-fast (inside the plant) in as little as one hour or as long as 12 hours. If a POST herbicide gets washed off to the soil, it becomes ineffective.
Herbicide Classification
Herbicide Timings
Herbicide retention on a leaf is affected by…
Leaf size
Leaf shape
Leaf surface area
Leaf angle
Herbicide Classification
Herbicide Timings
Good herbicide retention on a leaf occurs when…
Leaf size is LARGE
Leaf shape is WIDE
Leaf surface area is NON-WAXY
Leaf angle is HORIZONTAL (FLAT)
Herbicide Classification
Herbicide Timings
Poor herbicide retention on a leaf occurs when…
Leaf size is SMALL
Leaf shape is NARROW
Leaf surface area is WAXY
Leaf angle is UPRIGHT
Herbicide Classification
Herbicide Timings
Wild garlic and nutsedge species are examples of weeds that have narrow, waxy, upright leaves. Many herbicide particles tend to miss the plants entirely, or bounce or slide off the leaves.
For POST herbicides to be effective on these types of weeds, spray adjuvants are needed.
Herbicide Classification
Herbicide Timings
Adjuvants are chemicals added to a pesticide formulation or tank-mix to improve mixing and application, or enhance pesticide performance.
Check the herbicide label to determine if spray adjuvants are needed.
Herbicide Classification
Herbicide Timings
Spray adjuvants include…
Surfactants
Methylated seed oils
Crop oil concentrates
Herbicide Classification
Herbicide Timings
Surfactants consist of several classes of chemicals that reduce the interfacial tension between water and solids (plant material) or other liquids.
Herbicide Classification
Herbicide Timings
Classes of surfactants
Wetting Agents – used to increase the wetting capacity of water (make water wetter)
Spreaders – allow pesticides to form a uniform layer or coating over the treated surface
Stickers – cause pesticides to adhere to plant foliage and reduce spray runoff or washoff
Herbicide Classification
Herbicide Timings
Types of surfactants
Anionic – negatively charged, readily leach from soil
Cationic – positively charged, binds electrostatically to soil causing waterproofing
Nonionic – no charge, best type of surfactant to use
Herbicide Classification
Herbicide Labels
It is important to read and understand the label of any pesticides that you use, not just herbicides!!! For example…
PRE and POST herbicides generally should not be applied to newly seeded, sodded or sprigged turfgrass until it becomes well established.
Herbicide Classification
Herbicide Labels
Immature turfgrass seedlings can be affected by supposedly tolerant herbicides. Tolerance ultimately depends on root growth. This and other important information will be stated in the label. Individual labels will give their definition as to what is an established turfgrass.
Herbicide Classification
Herbicide Labels
Some PRE crabgrass and goosegrass herbicide labels state that applications should not be made to turfgrass seeded the previous fall.
Examples: benefin, oryzalin, benefin + trifluralin
Trimec Classic – POST Broadleaf HerbicideFescue seed can be sown 3 to 4 weeks after application
Do not apply to newly seeded turf until 2nd or 3rd mowing
Confront – POST Broadleaf HerbicideDo not reseed until 3 weeks after application
Newly seeded turf should be mowed 2 to 3 times before application
Millennium Ultra – POST Broadleaf HerbicideDo not apply to newly seeded turf until well established