JEQ Journal of Natural Resources and Life Sciences Education
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Published in J Environ Qual 12:336-340 (1983)
© 1983 American Society of Agronomy, Crop Science Society of America, and Soil Science Society of America
677 S. Segoe Rd., Madison, WI 53711 USA
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Application Mode and Alternate Cropping Effects on Atrazine Losses From a Hillside1

J. K. Hall, N. L. Hartwig and L. D. Hoffman2

ABSTRACT

External drainage losses of atrazine (2-chloro-4-[ethylamino]-6-[iso-propylamino]-s-triazine) were evaluated at two application rates, applied preemergent, and pre-plant-incorporated on a hillside where corn (Zea mays L.) was planted with and without oats (Avena sativa L.) as a strip crop at the slope base. The cropping pattern had the most striking influence on soil, water, and atrazine transport in a growing season where a 100-y frequency storm occurred during June. Statistical covariance analysis revealed that nearly 100% of the time, total atrazine residue losses in external drainage and soil sediment were most strongly related to the number of days from herbicide application to each erosion event.

The small grain strip or buffer zone reduced water and soil losses by 66 and 76%, respectively, compared with nonstripped areas, during 11 erosion events. Atrazine losses of 3.5 and 0.33% of that applied (2.2 kg/ha) were recorded in the absence and presence of an oat strip, which represented a 91% reduction in herbicide loss with strip cropping. At the 4.5 kg/ha application rate, herbicide losses were reduced by 65% in the stripped areas compared with the nonstripped areas. Minimal pre-plant incorporation of atrazine residues with the soil surface also significantly reduced residue loss with each cropping pattern. Using nonstripped, preemergent treated areas as a reference, pre-plant incorporation of atrazine with strip cropping reduced total atrazine losses by 91 and 87% at the two respective application rates, and allowed only 7 g/ha of atrazine loss at each rate. Therefore, a conventional tillage-management system combining a minimal surface-blending of atrazine residues with strip cropping provided soil, water, and chemical residue retention equivalent to that achieved in reduced-tillage crop management and controlled weeds effectively.

Key Words: herbicide transport • preemergence herbicide application • pre-plant herbicide incorporation • strip-crop management


NOTES

1 Paper no. 6552 in the Journal Series of the Pennsylvania Agric. Exp. Stn., University Park, PA 16802.

2 Associate Professors, Soil Chemistry and Weed Science, Senior Res. Assoc., The Pennsylvania State University, University Park, PA 16802, respectively.

Received for publication November 20, 1982.


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Tillage, Intercrop, and Controlled Drainage-Subirrigation Influence Atrazine, Metribuzin, and Metolachlor Loss
J. Environ. Qual., March 1, 2001; 30(2): 561 - 572.
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The SCI Journals Agronomy Journal Crop Science
Journal of Natural Resources
and Life Sciences Education
Vadose Zone Journal
Soil Science Society of America Journal Journal of Plant Registrations The Plant Genome
Copyright © 1983 by the American Society of Agronomy, Crop Science Society of America, and Soil Science Society of America.