Hostname: page-component-77c89778f8-9q27g Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-07-19T15:48:40.187Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Differential Intraspecific Responses of Soybean Cultivars to Bentazon

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 June 2017

R. M. Hayes
Affiliation:
Dep. Agron., Univ. of Illinois
L. M. Wax
Affiliation:
Dep. Agron., Univ. of Illinois

Abstract

Studies of the differential responses of soybean [Glycine max (L.) Merr.] cultivars to bentazon [3-isopropyl-1H-2,1,3,-benzothiadiazin-(4)3H-one 2,2-dioxide] revealed slightly greater translocation and about a twofold greater foliar absorption in the sensitive cultivar ‘PI 229.342 (Nookishirohana),’ than in the tolerant cultivar, ‘Clark 63.’ Clark 63 metabolized bentazon faster than did PI 229.342. Bentazon was metabolized to unidentified polar metabolites I and II in Clark 63, and only to metabolite II in PI 229.342. The differential absorption and metabolism resulted in a tenfold greater concentration of bentazon in the treated leaflet of PI 229.342 than in that of Clark 63 at 8 days after foliar treatment. Leaflets contained similar amounts of 14C in petiole uptake studies, but no bentazon was detected in Clark 63 leaflets 24 hr after pulse treatment, whereas about 20% of the methanol-extractable 14C from PI 229.342 leaflets cochromatographed with bentazon. Metabolite I was labile to selected enzymes with β-glycosidic activity, whereas metabolite II was unaffected. Bentazon concentrations of 30 to 50 μM inhibited O2 evolution about 50% in isolated chloroplasts from the two cultivars. Differential bentazon metabolism appears to be the main cause of the differential responses of these soybean cultivars to bentazon.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © 1975 by the Weed Science Society of America 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Literature Cited

1. Andersen, R.N. 1970. Influence of soybean seed size on response to atrazine. Weed Sci. 18:162164.Google Scholar
2. Arnon, D.I. 1949. Copper enzymes in isolated chloroplasts. Polyphenol oxidase in Beta vulgaris . Plant Physiol. 24:115.Google Scholar
3. Frear, D.S. and Swanson, H.R. 1974. Monuron metabolism in excised Gossypium hirsutum leaves: Aryl hydroxylation and conjugation of 4-chlorophenylurea. Phytochem. 13:357360.Google Scholar
4. Fribourg, H.A. and Johnson, I.J. 1955. Response of soybean strains to 2,4-D and 2,4,5-T. Agron. J. 47:171174.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
5. Hardcastle, W.S. 1974. Differences in the tolerance of metribuzin by varieties of soybeans. Weed Res. 14:181184.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
6. Hoagland, D.R. and Arnon, D.I. 1950. The water culture method for growing plants without soil. California Agr. Exp. Sta. Circ. 347. 32 pp.Google Scholar
7. Jacobsohn, R. and Andersen, R.N. 1972. Intraspecific differential response of wild oat and barley to barban. Weed Sci. 20:7480.Google Scholar
8. Magalhaes, A.C., Neyra, C.A., and Hageman, R.H. 1974. Nitrite assimilation and amino nitrogen synthesis in isolated spinach chloroplasts. Plant Physiol. 53:411415.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
9. Mahoney, M. and Penner, D. 1974. The basis for selectivity of bentazon between navy beans and several weed species. Weed Sci. Soc. Amer. Abstr. p. 127.Google Scholar
10. Miller, J.C. Jr., Penner, D., and Baker, L.R. 1973. Basis for variability in the cucumber for tolerance to chloramben methyl ester. Weed Sci. 21:207211.Google Scholar
11. Osgood, R.V., Romanowski, R.R., and Hilton, H.W. 1972. Differential tolerance of Hawaiian sugarcane cultivars to diuron. Weed Sci. 20:537539.Google Scholar
12. Shimabukuro, R.H., Frear, D.S., Swanson, H.R., and Walsh, W.C. 1971. Glutathione conjugation: An enzymatic basis for atrazine resistance in corn. Plant Physiol. 47:1014.Google Scholar
13. Smith, A.E. and Wilkinson, R.E. 1974. Differential absorption, translocation and metabolism of metribuzin [4-amino-6-tert-butyl-3-(methylthio)-as-triazine-5(4H)one] by soybean cultivars. Physiol. Plant. 32:253257.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
14. Smith, R.J. Jr. and Caviness, C.E. 1973. Differential responses of soybean cultivars to propanil. Weed Sci. 21:279281.Google Scholar
15. Walters, H.J. and Caviness, C.E. 1968. Response of phytophthora resistant and susceptible soybean varieties to 2,4-DB. Plant Dis. Reptr. 52:355357.Google Scholar
16. Wax, L.M., Bernard, R.L., and Hayes, R.M. 1974. Response of soybean cultivars to bentazon, bromoxynil, chloroxuron, and 2,4-DB. Weed Sci. 22:3541.Google Scholar
17. Williams, J.H. 1953. Differential varietal response of root tissue to exogenous growth regulators in soybeans, oats and corn. Agron. J. 45:293297.Google Scholar
18. Wright, T.H. and Rieck, C.E. 1973. Differential butylate injury to corn hybrids. Weed Sci. 21:194196.Google Scholar