MSU Affiliation
North Mississippi Research and Extension Center
Creation Date
2025-10-17
Abstract
Click on author name to view affiliation information Article Category: Research Article Online Publication Date: 12 Sept 2025 Page(s): 843 – 847 Volume/Issue: Volume 35: Issue 5 DOI: 10.21273/HORTTECH05727-25
Open Access
Abstract
Field studies were conducted at the Pontotoc Ridge–Flatwoods Branch Experiment Station in Pontotoc, MS, USA and the Horticultural Crops Research Station in Clinton, NC, USA in 2015 to determine pigweed (Amaranthus spp.) control and sweetpotato (Ipomoea batatas) crop response to fluridone herbicide. Treatments consisted of 168 g·ha−1 a.i. fluridone alone or tank-mixed with 54 g or 107 g·ha−1 a.i. flumioxazin applied pretransplanting, fluridone/flumioxazin combinations followed by (fb) a layby application of S-metolachlor (801 g·ha−1 a.i.), and 107 g·ha−1 flumioxazin alone pretransplanting with and without a layby application of S-metolachlor. Crop injury was minimal (≤7%), only observed in Mississippi, and transient. Nine weeks after transplanting (WAP), Palmer amaranth (A. palmeri) control in North Carolina was ≥95% with flumioxazin fb S-metolachlor and fluridone plus flumioxazin fb S-metolachlor. However, control with all other treatments ranged from 29% (fluridone alone) to 79% (fluridone fb S-metolachlor). Eight WAP, redroot pigweed (A. retroflexus) control in Mississippi ranged from 58% to 97%. Fluridone plus 107 g·ha−1 flumioxazin fb S-metolachlor provided the most control (97%), while all other treatments provided less control and were similar to one another. At both locations, season-long weed control was improved with a layby application of S-metolachlor, which resulted in increased jumbo and total yield. Although fluridone resulted in nominal sweetpotato injury in this study, it also provided minimal pigweed control when applied alone and provided only limited benefit when applied in combination with flumioxazin and fb S-metolachlor.
Publication Date
9-12-2025
Publication Title
HortTechnology
Publisher
American Society for Horticultural Science
First Page
843
Last Page
847
Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License
Recommended Citation
Meyers, S. L., Jennings, K. M., Shankle, M. W., & Main, J. L. (2025). Amaranthus spp. Control and Sweetpotato Tolerance to Fluridone-containing Herbicide Programs. HortTechnology, 35(5), 843–847. https://doi.org/10.21273/HORTTECH05727-25