Herbicide efficacy, leaf structure, and spray droplet contact angle among Ipomoea species and smallflower morningglory

  • Chachalis D
  • Reddy K
  • Elmore C
  • et al.
73Citations
Citations of this article
42Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.
Get full text

Abstract

Greenhouse and laboratory studies were conducted to evaluate responses of ivyleaf morningglory, pitted morningglory, palmleaf morningglory, and smallflower morningglory to several herbicides in relation to leaf structure, epicuticular wax, and spray droplet behavior. Two- to four-leaf stage plants of each species were highly susceptible to acifluorfen, bentazon, bromoxynil, glufosinate, and glyphosate. However, at the five- to eight-leaf stage, these species were less susceptible, and control was herbicide specific. Spray droplets of these five herbicides had a higher contact angle on ivyleaf morningglory than the other three species with a few exceptions. Stomata and glands were present on both adaxial and abaxial leaf surfaces of all species, and palmleaf morningglory and smallflower morningglory had more of these than did the other two species. Trichomes were present on all species except palmleaf morningglory. Epicuticular wax mass was highest in ivyleaf morningglory (57 mug cm(-2)) and lowest in smaflflower morningglory (14 mug cm(-2)). Wax consisted of homologous short-chain (< C-18) or long-chain (> C-20) hydrocarbons, alcohols, acids, and triterpenes. Smallflower morningglory waxes lacked short-chain length components. Triterpenes were absent in palmleaf morningglory and smallflower morningglory epicuticular waxes. Untriacontane (C-31 hydrocarbon) and tridecanol (C-30 alcohol) were common major long-chain components in waxes of all four species. Heptadeca-ne (C-17 hydrocarbon) and octanoic acid (C-18) were common major short-chain length wax components in pitted, ivyleaf, and palmleaf morningglory. In spite of some differences in leaf surface structures, wax mass, and wax components among the four species, there was no clear relationship between these parameters and herbicide efficacy.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Chachalis, D., Reddy, K. N., Elmore, C. D., & Steele, M. L. (2001). Herbicide efficacy, leaf structure, and spray droplet contact angle among Ipomoea species and smallflower morningglory. Weed Science, 49(5), 628–634. https://doi.org/10.1614/0043-1745(2001)049[0628:helsas]2.0.co;2

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free