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Aspects of the selective phytotoxicity of methazole. II. Behaviour in plants following root exposure
Authors:JULIE VERITY  ALLAN WALKER  DONALD SH DRENNAN†
Institution:National Vegetable Research Station, Welleshourne, Warwick CV35 9EF, U.K.;Department of Agricultural Botany, Plant Sciences Laboratories, University of Reading, Whiteknights, Reading RG6 2AS, U.K.
Abstract:The absorption, translocation and degradation of methazole were examined in onion, Stellaria media, Matricaria matricarioides and Veronica persica grown in culture solution. After a short period of initial rapid uptake, all four species absorbed herbicide and water in the same proportions. Translocation of herbicide to the shoots was directly proportional to transpiration, but the apparent solute concentration in the xylem was less than that in the external solution and varied between the species. A smaller percentage of the total absorbed herbicide was translocated to the shoot in V. persica, the most tolerant species. Methazole was relatively stable in M. matricariodes and was degraded slowly to 3-(3,4-dicnlorophenyl)-1-methylurea (DCPMU). It was degraded rapidly to DCPMU in the other three species and this accumulated in onion and S. media. In V. persica DCPMU was degraded further to 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl) urea (DCPU). Methazole was not an active inhibitor of photosynthesis by isolated spinach chloroplasts. Both DCPMU and DCPU inhibited photosynthesis but DCPMU was 200-times more active than DCPU. Variations in the concentrations of DCPMU in the shoots of the different species largely accounted for the variations in their response to methazole applied pre-emergence.
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