Occurrence of Multiple Glyphosate-Resistant Weeds in Brazilian Citrus Orchards
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Published:2023-06-14
Issue:2
Volume:5
Page:1068-1078
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ISSN:2624-7402
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Container-title:AgriEngineering
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language:en
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Short-container-title:AgriEngineering
Author:
Amaral Gabriel da Silva1, Alcántara-de la Cruz Ricardo1ORCID, Martinelli Rodrigo2, Rufino Junior Luiz Renato3, Carvalho Leonardo Bianco de4ORCID, Azevedo Fernando Alves de2ORCID, Silva Maria Fátima das Graças Fernandes da1ORCID
Affiliation:
1. Departamento de Química, Universidade Federal de São Carlos, São Carlos 13565-905, Brazil 2. Centro de Citricultura “Sylvio Moreira”, Instituto Agronômico (IAC), Cordeirópolis 13490-970, Brazil 3. Centro de Ciências Agrárias, Universidade Federal de São Carlos, Campus Araras, Araras 13604-900, Brazil 4. School of Agricultural and Veterinary Sciences, São Paulo State University (UNESP), Jaboticabal 14884-900, Brazil
Abstract
Glyphosate is the most widely used herbicide for weed control in citrus orchards in Brazil; therefore, it is likely that several species have gained resistance to this herbicide and that more than one resistant species can be found in the same orchard. The objective was to identify weeds resistant to glyphosate in citrus orchards from different regions of the São Paulo State (SP) and determine how many resistant species are present within the same orchard. Seeds of Amaranthus deflexus, A. hybridus, Bidens pilosa, Chloris elata, Conyza bonariensis, Digitaria insularis, Solanum Americanum, and Tridax procumbens, which, as reported by growers, are suspected to be resistant to glyphosate, were collected from plants that survived the last application of this herbicide (>720 g of acid equivalent [ae] ha–1) in sweet orange and Tahiti acid lime orchards. Based on dose–response and shikimic acid accumulation assays, all populations of A. deflexus, A. hybridus, B. pilosa, and T. procumbens were sensitive to glyphosate. However, populations of B. pilosa from the Olimpia region (R-NS, R-PT and R-OdA) showed signs of resistance based on plant mortality rates by 50% within a population (LD50 = 355–460 g ae ha−1). All populations of C. bonariensis, C. elata, and D. insularis were resistant to glyphosate, presenting resistance ratios from 1.9 to 27.6 and low shikimate accumulation rates. Solanum americanum also showed resistance, with resistance ratios ranging from 4.3 to 25.4. Most of the citrus orchards sampled presented the occurrence of more than one species resistant to glyphosate: Nossa Senhora—one species; Olhos D’agua and Passatempo—two species; Araras—four species; and Cordeiropolis and Mogi-Mirim—up to five species. The results reported in this paper provide evidence of multiple species in citrus orchards from São Paulo that have exhibited resistance to glyphosate. This underscores the difficulties in managing glyphosate-resistant weeds which are prevalent throughout the country, such as C. bonariensis and D. insularis. The presence of these resistant species further complicates the control of susceptible species that may also develop resistance. In addition, the glyphosate resistance of S. americanum was identified for the first time.
Funder
“Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo—FAPESP”
Subject
Engineering (miscellaneous),Horticulture,Food Science,Agronomy and Crop Science
Reference34 articles.
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