1. Spot Spraying Reduces Herbicide Concentrations in Runoff.
- Author
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Melland AR, Silburn DM, McHugh AD, Fillols E, Rojas-Ponce S, Baillie C, and Lewis S
- Subjects
- Agriculture instrumentation, Australia, Geologic Sediments analysis, Kinetics, Rain chemistry, Saccharum chemistry, Saccharum growth & development, Agriculture methods, Herbicides chemistry, Soil Pollutants chemistry, Water Pollutants, Chemical chemistry
- Abstract
Rainfall simulator trials were conducted on sugar cane paddocks across dry-tropical and subtropical Queensland, Australia, to examine the potential for spot spraying to reduce herbicide losses in runoff. Recommended rates of the herbicides glyphosate, 2,4-D, fluoroxypyr, atrazine, and diuron were sprayed onto 0, 20, 40, 50, 70, or 100% of the area of runoff plots. Simulated rainfall was applied 2 days after spraying to induce runoff at one plant cane and three ratoon crop sites. Over 50% of all herbicides were transported in the dissolved phase of runoff, regardless of the herbicide's sediment-water partition coefficient. For most sites and herbicides, runoff herbicide concentrations decreased with decreasing spray coverage and with decreasing herbicide load in the soil and cane residues. Importantly, sites with higher infiltration prior to runoff and lower total runoff had lower runoff herbicide concentrations.
- Published
- 2016
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