Agronomy Library > Annual Weeds

Tolerance of Common Buckwheat (Fagopyrum esculentum) to Low Rates of 2,4-D and MCPA.
Author: David A. Wall1 and Marjorie A. H. Smith2 (AAFC)
Date Created: June 07, 2000
Last Reviewed: February 14, 2007


Document Source: Canadian Journal of Plant Science. Volume 80:407-410

Summary
· Field studies were conducted from 1995 to 1997 at Morden and Brandon, Manitoba, Canada, to evaluate the effect of crop growth stage at application on common buckwheat (Fagopyrum esculentum Moench.) tolerance to low rates of 2,4-D amine, MCPA amine and the sodium salt of MCPA.

· Each formulation was applied at 140 g a.i. ha–1 to common buckwheat at the two- to three-leaf, four- to five-leaf, and six- to eight-leaf stages. Levels of buckwheat injury and seed yield loss were very similar for the three phenoxy herbicide formulations.

· Although early-season crop injury was severe, injury was often less, and crop recovery from injury greater, when herbicide was applied at the two-leaf stage than at the four-leaf or six-leaf stage. When herbicide was applied at the two-leaf stage, a significant yield reduction occurred in only one of the five trials. However, buckwheat seed yield decreased when phenoxy-herbicide application was delayed past the two-leaf stage. If low application rates of phenoxy herbicides to early stage buckwheat are effective in suppressing weed growth, then this treatment may enable the crop to out-compete weeds without sustaining yield losses in most years.