Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4507743 Crop Protection 2007 5 Pages PDF
Abstract

Irrigated field trials were conducted from 2001 to 2003 in Tifton, Georgia at the Coastal Plain Experiment Station to determine the optimum combination of pre-plant fumigation interval, metham-sodium dose, and seedbed mulching for yellow nutsedge control in transplanted cantaloupe. The trial evaluated all possible combinations of pre-plant fumigation intervals (1-wk, 2-wk, or 3-wk before transplanting), three metham-sodium doses (nontreated, 374, and 748 l/ha), and seedbed mulching (bareground or black polyethylene mulched seedbeds). Metham-sodium sprayed and soil incorporated at 374 and 748 l/ha effectively controlled yellow nutsedge when seedbeds were covered by black polyethylene mulch, with minimal fumigant phytotoxicity. In contrast, yellow nutsedge control from metham-sodium was reduced when seedbeds were not mulched. Cantaloupe treated either 1-wk or 2-wk before transplanting with metham-sodium at 748 l/ha yielded greater than other treatment combinations. Black polyethylene mulch increased cantaloupe yield when averaged across all possible combinations of pre-plant fumigation intervals and metham-sodium doses, due primarily to improved yellow nutsedge control over bareground seedbeds.

Related Topics
Life Sciences Agricultural and Biological Sciences Agronomy and Crop Science
Authors
, ,