Abstract
The aerial spraying of plant ripeners on sugar cane (Saccharum officinarum L.) crops causes often the contamination of neighboring areas, which subsidizes formal complaints from the neighbors. These contaminations are due to spraying taking place during inadequate environmental conditions or from technical mistakes during the application. One of the most important causes of this contamination is the susceptibility of the species being cultivated surrounding sugar cane. In order to evaluate the effects of sugar cane plant ripeners trinexapac-ethyl and sulfometuron-methyl on peanuts, cotton, potato, coffee, citrus, beans, sunflower, cassava, rubber, soybean, and grapes, eleven experiments - one for each species - were carried out from May 2009 to Jan. 2010. The field experiment was set according to a completely random design with five treatments and four replications. Just before or during flowering, a single treatment of trinexapac-ethyl at 100 or 200 g ha-1 and sulfometuron-methyl at 7.5 or 15 g ha-1 was applied to plants. A control treatment (plants not treated) for each species was part of each experiment. Trinexapac, at the doses of 100 and 200 g ha-1, showed selectivity to peanuts, cotton, potato, coffee, citrus, sunflower, cassava, rubber, soybean, and grape. At the lowest dose (100 g ha-1), it was selective for bean. Sulfometuron, at the dose of 7.5 g ha-1, was selective for peanuts and, at the two studied doses (7.5 and 15 g ha-1), it was selective for coffee, citrus, cassava, and rubber.
phytointoxication; ripener; sugar cane
CROP SCIENCE
Selectivity of the plant growth regulators trinexapac-ethyl and sulfometuron-methyl to cultivated species
Núbia Maria Correia* * Corresponding author < correianm@fcav.unesp.br> ; Gilson José Leite
UNESP/FCAV - Depto. de Fitossanidade, Via de Acesso Prof. Paulo Donato Castellane, s/n. - 14884-900 - Jaboticabal, SP - Brasil
ABSTRACT
The aerial spraying of plant ripeners on sugar cane (Saccharum officinarum L.) crops causes often the contamination of neighboring areas, which subsidizes formal complaints from the neighbors. These contaminations are due to spraying taking place during inadequate environmental conditions or from technical mistakes during the application. One of the most important causes of this contamination is the susceptibility of the species being cultivated surrounding sugar cane. In order to evaluate the effects of sugar cane plant ripeners trinexapac-ethyl and sulfometuron-methyl on peanuts, cotton, potato, coffee, citrus, beans, sunflower, cassava, rubber, soybean, and grapes, eleven experiments - one for each species - were carried out from May 2009 to Jan. 2010. The field experiment was set according to a completely random design with five treatments and four replications. Just before or during flowering, a single treatment of trinexapac-ethyl at 100 or 200 g ha-1 and sulfometuron-methyl at 7.5 or 15 g ha-1 was applied to plants. A control treatment (plants not treated) for each species was part of each experiment. Trinexapac, at the doses of 100 and 200 g ha-1, showed selectivity to peanuts, cotton, potato, coffee, citrus, sunflower, cassava, rubber, soybean, and grape. At the lowest dose (100 g ha-1), it was selective for bean. Sulfometuron, at the dose of 7.5 g ha-1, was selective for peanuts and, at the two studied doses (7.5 and 15 g ha-1), it was selective for coffee, citrus, cassava, and rubber.
Keywords: phytointoxication, ripener, sugar cane
Introduction
Plant ripeners used in sugar cane are defined as plant regulators whose action consists on modifications of plant morphology and physiology able to alter quantitatively and qualitatively plant production. These ripeners can reduce plant height, increase sucrose content, advance plant maturation, increase sugar yield, and they can also present effect on enzymes which catalyze sugar accumulation in the internodes (Castro, 1999; Dalley and Richard Junior, 2010).
In Brazil, the plant regulators trinexapac-ethyl and sulfometuron-methyl are used as sugar cane plant ripeners and as such they are reported to increase sugar yield, and have no negative effect on juice quality as well as on fiber content or on stem weight (Castro, 1999). These products are aerially sprayed on sugar cane plants from airplanes so that, if environmental conditions are not appropriate, or if technical mistakes are committed, variable amounts of the product may drift and be deposited on neighboring fields of various economically important cultivated species. Plant injuries may vary depending on the product, environmental conditions, and on the species susceptibility.
The Brazilian Government, through organizations such as the Ministry of Agriculture (MAPA), the National Agency for Sanitary Surveillance (ANVISA) and the Brazilian Institute for Environmental Preservation and Natural Renewable Resources (IBAMA), establishes, for a herbicide to be registered, a series of demands and guiding rules such as the determination of the herbicide quali-quantitative composition, physicochemical properties, toxicological proofs, residual analysis in foods, efficacy certificate, and selectivity to the target crop. But, tests to essay the response of non-target crops to herbicides are not demanded since the drift risk or application mistakes are unpredictable field events. This evaluation should nonetheless be part of the requirements, at least for herbicides registered to be aerially sprayed due to the increased possibility of contamination.
Trinexapac-ethyl and sulfometuron-methyl are the most widely used sugar cane plants ripeners. Thus, the determination of their degree of toxicity to important crops is necessary. This study aimed at testing the susceptibility of eleven economically important crops grown in the tropics to doses of these products applied before or at the onset of flowering.
Materials and Methods
Eleven experiments were conducted in pots kept outside under natural environmental conditions, from May 2009 to Jan. 2010, in Jaboticabal, state of São Paulo, Brazil. Local altitude is of 583 m above sea level, latitude is of 21º14'24" and longitude of 48º17'20". Each experiment was contained by one of the following cultivated plant species: peanuts (Arachis hypogaea L.), cotton (Gossypium hirsutum L.), potato (Solanum tuberosum L.), coffee (Coffea Arabica L.), beans (Phaseolus vulgaris L), sunflower (Helianthus annuus L.), cassava (Manihot esculenta Crantz), rubber (Hevea brasiliensis Muell. Agr.), soybean (Glycine max L.), and grapes (Vitis vinifera L.).
The experiment was a completely random design with five treatments (trinexapac-ethyl at 100 and 200 g ha-1, sulfometuron-methyl at 7.5 and 15 g ha-1 and the control treatment) and four replications. The studied doses were established considering the products recommendations for sugar cane, corresponding to 50 and 100 % of the recommended dose for each one of them.
The experimental unit was an eight-liter pot filled with native soil (63.7 % of sand, 31.0 % of clay, and 5.3 % of silt), sand, and an organic compound (organic material originating from plants), these components mixed in a 3:1:1 proportion by volume. The soil was fertilized with 0.1 g L-1 of N (urea), 1.2 g L-1 of P (triple superphosphate), and 0.15 g L-1 of K (potassium chloride). Soybean plants were not fertilized.
Each treatment of cotton, peanuts, beans, sunflower, and soybean were sown with 10 seeds per pot. After seedling emergence, a thinning left three plants per pot, with the exception of sunflower, for which two plants were left. Coffee, citrus, rubber, and grape were grown from by transplanted seedlings. Potato plants were formed from tuber pieces and cassava plants from stem cuttings.
The plant regulators were applied at or soon before flowering by means of a backpack sprayer under constant (controlled by CO2) pressure applied at of 200 L ha-1. In Table 1, the date and hour of applications as well as the air relative humidity, the air temperature and the wind speed and also the number of plants per pot can be observed. The plant varieties, the sowing date and the evaluations made for each species are shown in Table 2.
The data were analyzed by the F-test of the analysis of variance and, when statistically significant values (p < 0.01 or p < 0.05) were obtained, means were compared by the Tukey test (p = 0.05). SISVAR, a program for statistical analysis, was used.
Results
Seven days after application (DAA), trinexapac-ethyl at 200 g ha-1 caused phytotoxic symptoms in peanut (average of 6 %) although these symptoms had disappeared on the 21 DAA (Table 3). At the lower dose, this product caused no visible injury to the plants. Sulfometuron-methyl caused more severe symptoms with mean values of 16 % and 62 % at 36 DAA for the doses of 7.5 and 15 g ha-1, respectively. Nevertheless, the peanut plants, when submitted to 15 g ha-1 of sulfometuron-methyl, accumulated the highest dry weight which differed only from the treatment with trinexapac-ethyl at 200 g ha-1. Although the plants treated with sulfometuron at 15 g ha-1 showed the highest amounts of dry weight, they produced less seed weight, different from the plants treated with trinexapac at 100 g ha-1 (p < 0.05). When compared to the control treatment, plants treated with trinexapac at both doses showed no reduction in seed weight (p < 0.05). The yield components number of seeds per pot, number of pods per pot and number of seeds per pod were not significantly altered by the treatments.
Trinexapac-ethyl, at both studied doses, caused no toxicity symptoms in cotton plants (Table 4). However, sulfometuron-methyl, at both doses, caused visible injury to cotton plants, with mean values of 26 % and 50 % at 36 DAA for the doses of 7.5 and 15 g ha-1, respectively. When compared to the control, trinexapac had no effect on cotton plant growth, but sulfometuron did (p < 0.01). Cotton plants sprayed with sulfometuron were shorter and had lower dry weight than those of the control treatment (p < 0.01).
At 7 DAA, both plant regulators showed no toxicity symptoms on potato plants (Table 5). But, observations made on the 14 DAA, showed that sulfometuron at the doses of 7.5 and 15 g ha-1 caused symptoms classified as light (5 %) to moderate (11 %). However, on the 28 DAA, the symptoms had disappeared, as the plants recovered. Trinexapac, regardless of the dose, had no toxicity effects on the potato plants. As to the shoot dry weight and tubers fresh weight, the comparison between trinexapac at both doses and the control treatment had no differences (p < 0.01). The potato plants sprayed with 15 g ha-1 of sulfometuron had lower tubers fresh weight although with higher shoot dry weight (p < 0.01).
Trinexapac caused no visible injury to bean plants whereas sulfometuron caused damages classified as severe (mean values of 39 % and 59 % on the 10th DAA for doses of 7.5 and 15 g ha-1, respectively) although these symptoms faded away with time, indicating that the plants could recover from the damages (Table 6). When seed weight (p < 0.05) and number of seeds per plant (p < 0.01) were considered, in comparison with the control treatment, only trinexapac at 100 g ha-1 caused no reduction in plant performance. For number of pods, the results of trinexapac at both doses are not different from those of the control (p < 0.01). Number of seeds per pod, when comparisons with the control treatment are made, was not affected by any of the treatments.
Trinexapac, in comparison with the control treatment, independently of the dose, caused no negative effect on any of the evaluated characteristics sunflower plants. Nevertheless, plants were visibly damaged by both doses of sulfometuron, with injuries, classified as severe, caused dramatic reductions in plant growth (Table 7). These reductions are observed in plant height, in the shoot dry weight, and in flower head dry weight (p < 0.01).
Trinexapac, in comparison with the control treatment, at both doses, caused no visible damage to soybean plants (Table 8). Sulfometuron, caused severe injury to the plants with mean values of 74 % and 96 % at 37 DAA for the doses of 7.5 and 15 g ha-1. Sulfometuron at the dose of 7.5 g ha-1, though, had no effect on root dry weight (p < 0.01).
Grape plants showed no damage signs when they were treated with trinexapac at the dose of 100 g ha-1 (Table 9); at 200 g ha-1, though, trinexapac caused injuries classified from light (1 %) to moderate (9 %). Sulfometuron, in observations made 29 DAA, caused damages classified as severe with mean values between 49 % to 51 % for the doses of 7.5 and 15 g ha-1, respectively. The plants sprayed with trinexapac had values for shoot dry weight, number and fresh weight of clusters statistically similar to those found for the control treatment.
Trinexapac and sulfometuron, at both doses, had no effect on any of the evaluated plant characteristics of coffee, citrus, cassava, and rubber.
Discussion
The results herein reported support the hypothesis that the phytotoxic effects of trinexapac and sulfometuron are species dependent (some species are more susceptible than others) and that sulfumeturon is more toxic than trinexapac. This variability seems to be explained by the mode of action of the product in the plant and also by the capacity of the plant to detoxify themselves or metabolize the product.
Sulfometuron-methyl belongs to the sulfonylurea chemical group, and its primary site of action consists in the inhibiting of the enzyme acetolactate synthase (ALS) or the enzyme acetohydroxyacid synthase (AHAS) thus interfering in synthesis of the essential amino acids valine, leucine, and isoleucine (Cox, 2002; Zhou et al., 2007). In the USA, this active ingredient is used mostly in nonagricultural situations and as a selective herbicide on conifer plantations, hardwood plantations, and turf (Cox, 2002) at high doses [up to 52.5 g ha-1 (Ahrens, 1994)]. In Brazil, the doses used in sugar cane crops as a plant ripener are not higher than 15 g ha-1 (MAPA, 2011a).
The phytotoxic effect of sulfometuron for some crops has been reported. Novo and Miranda Filho (2006) reported decrements in the total number of tubers and in the fresh weight of normal tubers when increasing (from 0 to 15 g ha-1) doses of sulfometuron were applied to the plants. In another study, soil residues of sulfometuron larger than 240 parts per trillion caused distorted tubers with cracks and folds (Hutchinson et al., 2007). Olszyk et al. (2010) also observed that treatments with low levels of sulfometuron caused large reductions in tuber fresh weight. The effect on tuber fresh weight was due to reduced tuber size, insofar as it did not affect the number of tubers. In addition to that, sulfometuron had much less effect on potato plant vegetative growth than on tuber production. The importance of measuring tuber production and not just vegetative shoot growth as an indicator of risk from low levels of herbicides was highlighted by the response of the young potato plants to sulfometuron. There was a much greater effect on tuber yield than on vegetative growth, measured especially as shoot dry weight (Olszyk et al., 2010). In this study, the results indicated that the sulfometuron had an influence on the source-sink relation of the potato plant and this caused the partition process to be unbalanced resulting in an accumulation of photosynthates in the plant aerial part.
Soybean plants exposed to 5.25 g ha-1 of sulfometuron showed dramatic reductions in seed weight, seed number, pod number, and pod weight (Pfleeger et al., 2011). However, peas were generally more sensitive to low levels of sulfometuron than potatoes or soybeans, and pea reproductive endpoints were usually more sensitive than vegetative ones (Pfleeger et al., 2011). In the life cycle of a pea, the earlier its exposition occurred, the lower the concentration able to impact the fresh pea weight. Besides this, there are reports of phytotoxic effects of sulfometuron in plants of cherry, canola, sunflower, and smartweed (Cox, 2002). Cox (2002) reported that an investigation by the Idaho Department of Agriculture recently concluded that several million dollars worth of crops were damaged by wind transport from an aerial sulfometuron application made by the Bureau of Land Management to kill cheatgrass following a wildfire. Over a hundred farmers and ranchers reported damage on over 100,000 acres.
Data in the literature confirm those reported in this paper because the sulfometuron caused severe visual injuries in seven of the 11 species studied, them affecting plant growth. Dose effect was also observed for peanut plants, the plants treated with 7.5 g ha-1 were less affected than those receiving higher doses. Only peanut showed this response to dose. Bean, cotton, potato, soybean, sunflower, and grape plants showed extreme sensitivity to sulfometuron, even when submitted to the lowest dose. Coffee, citrus, cassava, and rubber plants, under the evaluated conditions, even when exposed to the highest dose of sulfometuron, showed no visible injury. Changes related to absorption, translocation, site of action, metabolism or even compartmentalization of sulfometuron by plants may explain the variability of response of species to action of the product.
Trinexapac is an acylcyclehexanedione (Caldas et al., 2009; Rademacher, 2000) that, in Poaceae species, such as wheat and rye, causes a reduction in the internode length and, consequently, in plant height. This has been used to reduce plant lodging (MAPA, 2011b; Espindula et al., 2009; Zagonel and Fernandes, 2007). This effect is explained by the trinexapac action on the synthesis of gibberellins, starting from the GA12 aldehyde which, among other functions, is responsible for cell elongation (Caldas et al., 2009; Dalley and Richard Junior, 2010; Rademacher, 2000). As a consequence of becoming incapable of synthesizing active gibberellins, the plants start to synthesize and accumulate biologically less efficient gibberellins and this causes reductions in cell elongation (Rademacher, 2000; Taiz and Zeiger, 2006). In dicotyledons, this inhibition is not so strong, thus justifying the selectivity of trinexapac to plants of that group (Rademacher, 2000).
In addition to the anti-lodging effect in cereals and increments on the sucrose production in sugar cane, the inhibitors of gibberellins synthesis retard the growth and flowering of grasses (Costa et al., 2009; Freitas et al., 2002) and the fructification of decidual fruit plants. Mouco et al. (2010) verified that spraying trinexapac at high doses (1.0 or a sequential value of 0.5 plus 0.5 g per plant) on 'Tommy Atkins' mango plants was efficient in controlling the vegetative growth of the branches. This effect would not be observed in the field simply by the occurrence of drift or technical procedures incorrectly applied, due to the low concentration per plant verified in this situation. Taking a population of 300,000 soybean plants per hectare the equivalent concentration per plant would be of 0.33 and 0.67 mg per plant in a direct spraying of trinexapac at doses of 100 or 200 g ha-1. These values are well below those used in orchards for retarding vegetative growth and consequent management of floral induction.
Trinexapac was selective to the studied species with the exception of beans which was sensitive to the higher dose of the product. In that concentration, seed weight underwent reduction compared to control treatment. The less aggressive effect of trinexapac as compared to that of sulfometuron was expected, because the trinexapac is indeed classified as a plant regulator and not a herbicide. This product cause plant height reductions in species of the Poaceae family but without effect on grain yield (Zagonel and Fernandes, 2007). Trinexapac, at 100 and 200 g ha-1, was considered safe for aerial spraying in sugarcane crops causing no risks to the tested dicotyledonous species even if drifting or technical mistakes during the product spraying occur. As already mentioned, bean plants, if exposed to the higher dose, will exhibit injury signs.
We could not find any reports in the literature about phytotoxic effects of trinexapac on the vegetative or reproductive development on dicotyledonous crops. In addition, little information is available concerning the effects of sulfometuron on non target crops. It is a potent herbicide whose toxic action in sensitive plants is being currently under study in others regions with temperature climates such as North America and Europe. However, in Brazil and other tropical countries, this subject has scarcely been considered by researchers. Other similar research is needed, ideally under field conditions. The objectives of such investigations should be exposure at various concentrations and the application at different developmental stages.
Conclusions
Trinexapac-ethyl, at the doses of 100 and 200 g ha-1, showed phytotoxic selectivity to peanuts, cotton, potato, coffee, citrus, sunflower, cassava, rubber, soybean, and grape. At the lowest dose (100 g ha-1), it was selective for bean. Sulfometuron-methyl, at the dose of 7.5 g ha-1, was selective for peanuts and, at the two studied doses (7.5 and 15 g ha-1), it was selective for coffee, citrus, cassava, and rubber.
Received February 10, 2011
Accepted December 01, 2011
Edited by: Leonardo Oliveira Medici
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Publication Dates
-
Publication in this collection
06 Mar 2012 -
Date of issue
June 2012
History
-
Received
10 Feb 2011 -
Accepted
01 Dec 2011