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Managing Weeds in Mississippi Soybean without Dicamba

Publication Number: P3984
View as PDF: P3984.pdf

Conventional

Preplant1,2

Paraquat + Group 14 herbicide3 + Group 15 herbicide4

Preemergence2,5

Paraquat + metribuzin + Group 15 herbicide4

Postemergence6,7

Cobra, fomesafen, or Ultra Blazer + Group 15 herbicide4

Postemergence as Needed7,8

Cobra or Ultra Blazer

Enlist

Preplant1,2

Paraquat + Group 14 herbicide3 + Group 15 herbicide4

Preemergence2,5

Paraquat + metribuzin + Group 15 herbicide4

Postemergence6,7

(Enlist One + glufosinate) or Enlist Duo + Group 15 herbicide4

Postemergence as Needed7,8

(Enlist One + glufosinate) or Enlist Duo

Enlist, LibertyLink GT27, or Roundup Ready 2 XtendFlex

Preplant1,2

Paraquat + Group 14 herbicide3 + Group 15 herbicide4

Preemergence2,5

Paraquat + Metribuzin + Group 15 herbicide4

Postemergence6,7

Glufosinate or glyphosate + Fomesafen + Group 15 herbicide4

Postemergence as Needed7,8

Glufosinate or glyphosate + Cobra or Ultra Blazer

Enlist, LibertyLink GT27, Roundup Ready 2, Xtend, OR XtendFlex

Preplant1,2

Paraquat + Group 14 herbicide3 + Group 15 herbicide4

Preemergence2,5

Paraquat + Metribuzin + Group 15 herbicide4

Postemergence6,7

Glyphosate + Fomesafen + Group 15 herbicide4

Postemergence as Needed7,8

Glyphosate + Cobra or Ultra Blazer

Footnotes

  1. Preplant applications should be made 14 to 21 days prior to planting and after final bed preparation in fields with targeted soybean planting date later than April 15. A preemergence application should be made before crop emergence. Control with residual herbicides will be compromised if beds are disturbed after application.
  2. The use of full labeled rates of residual herbicides is imperative for herbicide-resistant weed management. Residual herbicides require incorporation from rainfall or irrigation, and level of control and length of residual will vary with rainfall totals. When properly incorporated, residual herbicides can control weeds for 2 to 3 weeks depending on time of year, soil moisture, and weed pressure.
  3. Residual herbicides in Group 14 are protoporphyrinogen oxidase inhibitors (PPOs). Group 14 herbicides recommended for use in Mississippi soybean contain flumioxazin (Panther, Valor, Varsity, etc.), fomesafen (Flexstar, Reflex, etc.), Sharpen, or sulfentrazone (Authority products, Spartan Charge, Zone Defense). See flumioxazin label for restrictions on mixing with metolachlor/S-metolachlor or Outlook. Herbicide labels should be consulted for seasonal maximum use rates and rotation intervals to other crops.
  4. Herbicides in Group 15 are very long chain fatty acid synthesis inhibitors (VLCFAs). Group 15 herbicides recommended for use in Mississippi soybean contain metolachlor/S-metolachlor, Outlook, pyroxasulfone (Anthem Maxx, Perpetuo, Zidua), and Warrant (postemergence applications only due to environmental sensitivity). Herbicide labels should be consulted for seasonal maximum use rates and rotation intervals to other crops.
  5. For all targeted soybean planting dates, preemergence applications should be made before soybean emergence up to 7 days prior to planting. Some soybean varieties are susceptible to injury from metribuzin. Manufacturer information should be consulted during variety selection for level of metribuzin tolerance.
  6. The postemergence application should be made from 7 to 21 days after soybean planting with precise timing dictated by efficacy of preplant and/or preemergence treatments, soybean growth rate, and environmental conditions. Earlier applications should be utilized if previous treatments were not incorporated or when temperatures are warm and soybean and/or existing weeds are growing rapidly.
  7. Spray coverage is critical for weed control with contact herbicides such as Cobra, fomesafen, Ultra Blazer, and glufosinate. Nozzles producing coarse droplets should not be used for contact herbicides. However, Enlist Duo and Enlist One have specific nozzle requirements. Manufacturer information should be consulted for appropriate nozzles for applications containing these products.
  8. Salvage treatment should target escaped Palmer amaranth not controlled by earlier applications.

For more information, contact Jason Bond, MSU Extension weed scientist.

Reference to commercial products or trade names within information provided by the Mississippi State University Extension Service and the Mississippi Agricultural and Forestry Experiment Station does not constitute an endorsement by the MSU Extension Service and the Mississippi Agricultural and Forestry Experiment Station and does not imply discrimination against other similar products.

Publication 3984 (03-24)

By Jason Bond, PhD, Extension/Research Professor, Delta Research and Extension Center; Trent Irby, PhD, Interim Associate Director and Extension Professor, Plant and Soil Sciences; and Brian Pieralisi, PhD, Assistant Professor, Plant and Soil Sciences.

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Authors

Portrait of Dr. Trent Irby
Associate Director & Professor
Portrait of Dr. Jason Bond
Extension/Research Professor
Weed control in agronomic crops
Portrait of Dr. Brian K. Pieralisi
Assistant Professor

Your Extension Experts

Portrait of Dr. Jason Bond
Extension/Research Professor
Portrait of Dr. John D. Byrd, Jr.
Extension/Research Professor
Portrait of Dr. Trent Irby
Associate Director & Professor