Response of Corn (Zea maysL.) Inbreds and Hybrids to Sulfonylurea Herbicides
- 1 September 1993
- journal article
- special topics
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in Weed Science
- Vol. 41 (3) , 508-516
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s0043174500052267
Abstract
Extensive field and greenhouse studies were done to characterize varietal response of three recently commercialized sulfonylurea corn herbicides: nicosulfuron, primisulfuron, and thifensulfuron. Most of the 94 varieties tested were highly tolerant to these herbicides. The 37 inbreds represented all major inbred families now used in hybrid seed production as well as several sensitive experimentals. Twenty-one defined hybrids from these inbreds as well as 36 commercially coded hybrids were also tested. Sensitive inbreds produced tolerant hybrids when crossed with tolerant inbreds. Sensitive hybrids occurred when both parents were sensitive. Genetic analysis of sensitive by tolerant crosses showed that sensitivity is controlled by a single recessive gene. Nicosulfuron had the widest corn safety margin and fewest sensitive varieties. Dose response analysis showed varieties can vary more than 40 000-fold in sensitivity. Only corn varieties with the AHAS-modified XA-17 gene showed any change in enzyme sensitivity. This gene overcame sensitivity to sulfonylureas, even when the organophosphate insecticide terbufos was present. Thus, breeders have three options to eliminate sulfonylurea sensitivity: backcross sensitive inbreds with tolerant, always use at least one tolerant hybrid parent, or use the XA-17 gene.Keywords
This publication has 10 references indexed in Scilit:
- Surfactant Structure and Concentration Strongly Affect Rimsulfuron ActivityWeed Technology, 1993
- Response of Sweet Corn (Zea mays) to Nicosulfuron and PrimisulfuronWeed Technology, 1992
- Sweet Corn (Zea mays) Hybrid Tolerance to NicosulfuronWeed Technology, 1992
- Mutations in corn (Zea mays L.) conferring resistance to imidazolinone herbicidesTheoretical and Applied Genetics, 1991
- Effect of DPX-V9360 and Terbufos on Field and Sweet Corn (Zea mays) Under Three EnvironmentsWeed Technology, 1991
- The Influence of Terbufos on the Response of Five Corn (Zea mays) Hybrids to CGA-136872Weed Technology, 1991
- Differential Response of Corn Hybrids and Inbreds to MetolachlorWeed Science, 1990
- Semidominant Soybean Mutation for Resistance to Sulfonylurea HerbicidesCrop Science, 1989
- Response of maize (Zea mays L.) inbred lines and hybrids to chlorsulfuronWeed Research, 1989
- Differential Tolerance of Corn Genotypes to DPX-M6316Weed Science, 1989