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Physiological basis for antagonism of clethodim by imazapic on goosegrass (Eleusine indica (L.) Gaertn.)
Authors:Ian C. BurkeJohn W. Wilcut
Affiliation:Crop Science Department, Williams Hall 4402A, Box 7620, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, NC 27695-7620, USA
Abstract:Greenhouse and laboratory experiments were conducted to determine the effect of imazapic on the herbicidal activity of clethodim on goosegrass. Imazapic did not affect absorption of [14C]clethodim by goosegrass. Averaged across the two treatments of clethodim alone and clethodim plus imazapic, absorption was 36 and 89% of applied [14C]clethodim at 0.5 and 96 h, respectively. The majority of [14C]clethodim (79% of applied) was absorbed by 24 h. Translocation of 14C was not affected by imazapic, and 3.6% of applied 14C had translocated into the portion of the shoot below the treated leaf at 96 h after treatment. Metabolism of clethodim was not affected by the presence of imazapic. Three major metabolites of clethodim were detected in treated tissue at all harvest intervals. The majority (58%) of [14C]clethodim was converted to a relative polar metabolite form 96 h after treatment, whether clethodim was applied alone or in the presence of imazapic. One day after treatment, the photosynthetic rate in plants treated with imazapic decreased below the rate in the non-treated check, and was less for 8 days, the duration of the study. These data suggest that the antagonism of clethodim by imazapic may be caused by imazapic reducing the photosynthetic rate of goosegrass and therefore the sensitivity of ACCase to clethodim.
Keywords:Absorption   Acetyl-coenzyme A carboxylase   Metabolism   Translocation
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