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Reduced translocation is involved in resistance to glyphosate and paraquat in <i>Conyza bonariensis</i> and <i>Conyza canadensis</i> from California
49
Citations
29
References
2016
Year
EngineeringBotanyGeneticsAgricultural EconomicsWeed ControlPlant PathologyToxicologyCrop-weed InteractionWeed ScienceSummary ResistancePlant BiologyHerbicide AbsorptionPlant ProtectionPest ManagementGenetic VariationIntegrated Plant ProtectionGpr LinesBiologyEvolutionary BiologyCrop ProtectionInduced ResistanceMedicinePlant Physiology
Summary Resistance to glyphosate and paraquat has evolved in some populations of Conyza spp. from California, USA. This study evaluated whether herbicide absorption and translocation were involved in the mechanism of resistance to both herbicides. Three lines of each species were used: glyphosate‐paraquat‐susceptible ( GPS ), glyphosate‐resistant ( GR ) and glyphosate‐paraquat‐resistant (GPR). Radiolabelled herbicide was applied to a fully expanded leaf, and absorption and movement out of the treated leaf were monitored for up to 24 h for paraquat and 72 h for glyphosate. Plants treated with paraquat were incubated in darkness for the first 16 h and then subjected to light conditions. More glyphosate was absorbed in C. bonariensis (52.9–58.3%) compared with C. canadensis (28.5–37.6%), but no differences in absorption were observed among lines within a species. However, in both species, the GR and GPR lines translocated less glyphosate out of the treated leaf when compared with their respective GPS lines. Paraquat absorption was similar among lines and across species (71.3–77.6%). Only a fraction of paraquat was translocated in the GPR lines (3% or less) when compared with their respective GPS or GR lines (20% or more) in both species. Taken together, these results indicate that reduced translocation is involved in the mechanism of resistance to glyphosate and paraquat in C. bonariensis and C. canadensis .
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