Weed Control with Sulfentrazone plus a Low Rate of Imazethapyr in White Bean

Ontario dry bean (Phaseolus vulgaris L.) growers have few options for broadleaf weed control. Sulfentrazone is a group 14 herbicide that provides good control of several common Ontario weed species, and would provide another mode of action for broadleaf weed control if registered for use in Ontario dry beans. Five field studies were conducted during 2014 and 2015 to determine if a low dose of imazethapyr added to a tank mix of sulfentrazone + s-metolachlor would improve broadleaf control in white bean. Sulfentrazone (140 and 210 g∙ai∙ha−1) was mixed with imazethapyr and s-metolachlor and evaluated at 2 and 4 weeks after crop emergence for crop injury. Weed control was assessed visually at 4 and 8 weeks after herbicide application (WAA), and weed stand counts and biomass were determined at 8 WAA. Seed moisture and yield were determined at harvest. At 8 WAA, sulfentrazone (140 g∙ai∙ha−1) controlled pigweed species, common ragweed, common lambsquarters, wild mustard, barnyard grass and green foxtail 100%, 4%, 100%, 2%, 86% and 62%, respectively. The addition of imazethapyr (37.5 g∙ai∙ha−1) to sulfentrazone (140 g∙ai∙ha−1) improved the control of common ragweed, wild mustard and green foxtail by 19%, 98% and 33%, respectively. The three-way tank mix of sulfentrazone (140 g∙ai∙ha−1) plus s-metolachlor (1050 g∙ai∙ha−1) plus imazethapyr (37.5 g∙ai∙ha−1) controlled pigweed species, common ragweed, common lambsquarters, wild mustard, barnyard grass and green foxtail 100%, 35%, 100%, 100%, 96% and 100%, respectively. The tank mixes evaluated caused unacceptably high levels of crop injury; this study does not support the registration of sulfentrazone plus s-metolachlor + imazethapyr for use in Ontario white bean.


Introduction
In 2015, Ontario growers produced 115,000 tonnes of dry edible beans (Phaseolus vulgaris L.) on 52,600 ha of land [1].White bean accounted for over half of this production, and has been the prominent market class of dry bean grown in Ontario for several decades [2].Dry beans are extremely sensitive to weed pressure and do not compete well.Some studies have reported white bean yield losses between 68% and 77% due to weed interference [3]- [5].Weeds can also reduce the quality of the beans through dockage, pick, or plant juices causing discolouration of the seed coat.Therefore, weed control is a critical component of dry bean production.One method of controlling weeds is with the use of herbicides.
Sulfentrazone is a group 14, protoporphyrinogen oxidase IX (PPO) inhibitor herbicide in the aryl triazone family, recently registered in Ontario for use in soybean (Glycine max L.).Sulfentrazone causes excessive accumulation of protoporphyrinogen IX in the chloroplasts of plant cells.The excess protoporphyrinogen IX leaks out of the chloroplast and undergoes various reactions in the cytoplasm to produce O + radicals, which then peroxidizes lipids in cell membranes.Cell membrane integrity is compromised, the cell dies, and the plant can no longer function normally [1].Sulfentrazone is primarily a broadleaf herbicide that also has some grass activity, and controls common Ontario weed species such as redroot pigweed (Amaranthus retroflexus L.), common waterhemp (Amaranthus tuberculatus VAR.rudis), common lambsquarters (Chenopodium album L.), crabgrass (Digitaria), foxtail (Setaria) and Panicum species [6]- [8].
There is little information on sulfentrazone for broadleaf weed control in Ontario.If registered in Ontario, sulfentrazone would provide dry bean growers with a different mode of action for broadleaf control.The objectives of this research were to determine if a low rate of imazethapyr added to sulfentrazone would improve broadleaf weed control, and to determine the tolerance of white bean to sulfentrazone, s-metolachlor, and imazethapyr applied alone and in combination.

Materials and Methods
Five field studies were conducted over 2014 and 2015 at the Huron Research Station (Exeter) and the University of Guelph Ridgetown Campus (Ridgetown) in Ontario, Canada.The soil at the 2014 site near Exeter was a clay loam comprised of 31%, 42% and 27% sand, silt, and clay, respectively, and had a pH of 7.8 and organic matter content of 4.3%.In 2015, the first Exeter site was a loamy soil of 32% sand, 42% silt, 26% clay, pH of 7.7 and organic matter content of 3.2%.The second Exeter site in 2015 was also a loam consisting of 35% sand, 43% silt and 22% clay, pH of 7.6 and organic matter content of 3.6%.In 2015, Ridgetown soils were sandy clay loams, with the first site having a sand, silt and clay content of 52%, 24% and 24%, respectively, a pH of 7.3 and organic matter content of 4.3%, and the second site consisting of 46% sand, 27% silt, 27% clay, a pH of 6.4 and organic matter content of 3.7%.All sites were prepared by moldboard ploughing in the fall and two passes with an s-tine cultivator with rolling baskets in the spring.Plots were 3 m by 10 m in Exeter and 3 m by 8 m in Ridgetown, and were seeded with white bean variety T9905 at a rate of approximately 233,000 seeds ha −1 , 4 to 5 cm deep in rows spaced 75 cm apart.All experiments were seeded in late May to early June.
The experiments were arranged in randomized complete block design with four replicates of thirteen treatments.An untreated weedy control and a weed-free control were included in each replicate; the weed-free control was sprayed with s-metolachlor (1050 g•ai•ha −1 ) + halosulfuron (35 g•ai•ha −1 ) applied PRE and maintained weed-free by hand-hoeing for the rest of the season.Herbicide treatments included s-metolachlor (1050 g•ai•ha −1 ) for grass control, sulfentrazone at 140 and 210 g•ai•ha −1 , imazethapyr at 37.5 g•ai•ha −1 (half the registered label rate), and various co-applications of these herbicides (Table 1).Herbicides were applied PRE using a 1.5 m handheld boom with four ULD 120-02 nozzles (Hypro, New Brighton, MN) attached to a CO 2 pressurized backpack sprayer calibrated to deliver 200 L•ha −1 at 240 kPa.
White bean injury was assessed at two and four weeks after crop emergence (WAE) by visually comparing the white beans in each herbicide treatment to the weed-free control, and was ranked from 0% (no injury) to 100% (total plant death).Weed control was assessed by species at four and eight weeks after herbicide application (WAA) by visually comparing the weeds in each herbicide treatment to the weedy control, and was ranked from 0% (no control) to 100% (complete control).At 8 WAA, weed density and biomass for each species were determined by a stand count in 1 m 2 per plot, after which the weeds were cut at the soil surface, placed in a separate paper bag for each species, dried in a kiln, and weighed.Seed moisture and yield-adjusted to 18% moisture-were recorded at harvest.
All analyses were performed using SAS 9.4 software (SAS Institute Inc., NC).Data were partitioned into the fixed effects of treatment and the random effects of replicate, environment (year-location combination), replicate nested within environment, and environment by treatment interaction.The F-test was used to determine the significance of the fixed effects and the Z-test was used to determine the significance of the random effects.The UNIVARIATE procedure was used to test the assumptions of homogeneity and normality of the residuals with various transformations of the data.All transformations applied to the data met the assumptions, therefore the transformation that produced the least amount of error was selected for the analysis.Crop injury, seed moisture, yield, and weed control data were transformed with the arcsine square root transformation.Weed density and biomass data were analysed with a logarithmic transformation.The MIXED procedure was used to perform an analysis of variance on all data, using a Fisher's Protected LSD test with α = 0.05.Data were converted back to the original scale for presentation.

Results and Discussion
Analyses determined that replicate, environment, and replicate within environment effects were not significant; therefore data were pooled for analysis.

Pigweed Species
Green pigweed (Amaranthus powelli L.) was the dominant pigweed species at the Ridgetown locations and redroot pigweed (A.retroflexus) was the dominant species at the Exeter locations.Pigweed species were combined for analysis.At 4 WAA, all herbicides and herbicide combinations provided excellent (≥92%) control of pigweeds (Table 2).Sulfentrazone (140 and 210 g•ai•ha −1 ) controlled pigweeds 100%, while s-metolachlor provided 93% control and imazethapyr provided 92% control.There was no improvement in pigweed control when sulfentrazone was used in a co-application versus sulfentrazone applied alone.At 8 WAA, sulfentrazone, s-metolachlor and imazethapyr controlled pigweed species 100%, 79% and 87%, respectively.Tank mixes of sulfentrazone + s-metolachlor, sulfentrazone + imazethapyr and sulfentrazone + s-metolachlor + imazethapyr provided excellent (≥98%) control of pigweeds.All herbicides and herbicide combinations reduced pigweed density and biomass by 91% to 100% and 86% to 100%, respectively, and were not different from the weed-free control.This is consistent with other studies which found excellent control of redroot pigweed with sulfentrazone at similar rates [14] [15].

Wild Mustard
At 4 WAA, sulfentrazone at 140 and 210 g•ai•ha −1 provided 35% and 80% control, respectively, s-metolachlor provided 31% control, and imazethapyr provided 97% control of wild mustard (Table 5).Sulfentrazone (140 g•ai•ha −1 ) tank-mixed with s-metolachlor improved control to 76%, while sulfentrazone (210 g•ai•ha −1 ) + s-metolachlor did not provide improved control compared to sulfentrazone alone.The level of control with sulfentrazone (140 and 210 g•ai•ha −1 ) + s-metolachlor decreased as the season progressed, with only 8% and 25% control, respectively, at 8 WAA.In contrast, sulfentrazone (140 and 210 g•ai•ha −1 ) plus imazethapyr provided 97% to 100% control throughout the season.The co-application of all three herbicides provided 100% control at both 4 and 8 WAA.Sikkema et al. [11] found that imazethapyr applied PRE at rates as low as 15 g•ai•ha −1 still provided up to 100% control of wild mustard, which likely contributes to the high level of control throughout the season.Sulfentrazone alone at 140 and 210 g•ai•ha −1 reduced wild mustard density by 7% and 55%, respectively, but was not an improvement compared to the weedy control.There was no reduction in density when sulfentrazone was combined with s-metolachlor, but sulfentrazone (140 and 210 g•ai•ha −1 ) + imazethapyr reduced density by up to 97%.Similarly, sulfentrazone alone reduced wild mustard biomass by up to 33% but was not different  from the weedy control, and reduction was not improved when tank-mixed with s-metolachlor but was improved to almost 100% when tank-mixed with imazethapyr.Sulfentrazone (140 and 210 g•ai•ha −1 ) + s-metolachlor + imazethapyr reduced wild mustard density by 98% to 100% and biomass by 100%.

Seed Moisture Content and Yield
There was no impact on white bean seed moisture at harvest, indicating that weed interference and/or herbicide injury did not cause delayed maturity (Table 1).However, there were variations in yield amongst the treatments.Weed interference reduced white bean yield 52%. Weed interference with sulfentrazone alone at 140 and 210 g•ai•ha −1 resulted in the lowest numeric yields among the herbicide treatments evaluated at 1.42 and 1.49 T•ha −1 , respectively.Reduced weed interference with s-metolachlor, imazethapyr, and imazethapyr + s-metolachlor produced yields that were 33%, 34% and 32% lower than the weed-free control, and were not different than the weedy control.The addition of s-metolachlor or imazethapyr to sulfentrazone did not improve yields compared to sulfentrazone alone, and were not improved relative to the weedy control.Sulfentrazone (210 g•ai•ha −1 ) + s-metolachlor + imazethapyr produced the third lowest yield at 1.60 T•ha −1 .As this co-application produced the highest amount of injury, it is likely this 37% yield loss is mostly attributed to herbicide injury rather than weed interference.In contrast, sulfentrazone (140 g•ai•ha −1 ) + s-metolachlor + imazethapyr produced the highest yield of all the herbicide treatments at 1.89 T•ha −1 , and was the only treatment that produced a yield greater than the weedy control.It is likely that the high yield produced by this co-application is due to less injury and better broad spectrum weed control compared to the other tank mixes evaluated in this study.

Conclusion
This study found that PRE applications of sulfentrazone provide excellent control of pigweeds and common lambsquarters.The addition of imazethapyr to sulfentrazone increased wild mustard control to 100%, and while it did improve common ragweed control compared to sulfentrazone alone, it did not improve control to an acceptable level.Sulfentrazone + s-metolachlor + imazethapyr provided excellent control of pigweeds, lambsquarters, wild mustard, barnyard grass and green foxtail, but did not have an acceptable margin of crop safety.Based on this study, tank mixes of sulfentrazone + s-metolachlor + imazethapyr are too injurious to Ontario white bean for registration.Further research is needed to determine if sulfentrazone is a suitable herbicide for weed management programs in other market classes of dry beans in Ontario.

Table 1 .
Mean visible injury, seed moisture content at harvest, and yield (adjusted to 18% moisture) of white bean treated with sulfentrazone, imazethapyr and s-metolachlor PRE in five field studies over two years at the University of Guelph Ridgetown Campus, Ridgetown, ON (2015) and Huron Research Station, Exeter, ON (2014, 2015) a .
a Abbreviations: PRE, pre-emergence; WAE, weeks after emergence.Data are averaged for years and locations.Means followed by the same letter within a column are not statistically different at α = 0.05 using Fisher's Protected LSD.

Table 2 .
Mean control, plant density and biomass ratings for pigweeds (A.powelli and A. retroflexus) treated with tank mixes of sulfentrazone, imazethapyr and s-metolachlor applied PRE in Ridgetown, ON and Exeter, ON, Canada over two years (2014, 2015) a .
a Abbreviations: PRE, pre-emergence; WAA, weeks after application.Means followed by the same letter within a column are not statistically different at α = 0.05 using Fisher's Protected LSD.Data are averaged for years and locations.

Table 3 .
Mean control, plant density and biomass ratings for common ragweed (Ambrosia artemisiifolia) treated with tank mixes of sulfentrazone, imazethapyr and s-metolachlor applied PRE in Ridgetown, ON and Exeter, ON, Canada over two years (2014, 2015) a .
a Abbreviations: PRE, pre-emergence; WAA, weeks after application.Means followed by the same letter within a column are not statistically different at α = 0.05 using Fisher's Protected LSD.Data are averaged for years and locations.

Table 4 .
Mean control, plant density and biomass ratings for common lamb's quarters (Chenopodium album) treated with tank mixes of sulfentrazone, s-metolachlor and imazethapyr applied PRE in Ridgetown, ON and Exeter, ON, Canada over two years (2014, 2015) a .
a Abbreviations: PRE, pre-emergence; WAA, weeks after application.Means followed by the same letter within a column are not statistically different at α = 0.05 using Fisher's Protected LSD.Data are averaged for years and locations.

Table 5 .
Mean control, plant density and biomass ratings for wild mustard (Sinapis arvensis) treated with tank mixes of sulfentrazone, imazethapyr and s-metolachlor applied PRE in Exeter, ON, Canada over two years (2014, 2015) a .
a Abbreviations: PRE, pre-emergence; WAA, weeks after application.Means followed by the same letter within a column are not statistically different at α = 0.05 using Fisher's Protected LSD.Data are averaged for years and locations.

Table 6 .
Mean control, plant density and biomass ratings for barnyard grass (Echinochloa crusgalli) treated with tank mixes of sulfentrazone, imazethapyr and s-metolachlor applied PRE in Ridgetown, ON and Exeter, ON, Canada over two years (2014, 2015) a .
a Abbreviations: PRE, pre-emergence; WAA, weeks after application.Means followed by the same letter within a column are not statistically different at α = 0.05 using Fisher's Protected LSD.Data are averaged for years and locations.

Table 7 .
Mean control, plant density and biomass ratings for green foxtail (Setaria viridis) treated with tank mixes of sulfentrazone, imazethapyr and s-metolachlor applied PRE in Ridgetown, ON and Exeter, ON, Canada over two years (2014, 2015) a .
a Abbreviations: PRE, pre-emergence; WAA, weeks after application.Means followed by the same letter within a column are not statistically different at α = 0.05 using Fisher's Protected LSD.Data are averaged for years and locations.