1 / 40

Using Brassicaceae seed meals and seed meal extracts as bioherbicides

Using Brassicaceae seed meals and seed meal extracts as bioherbicides. Lydia Clayton, Donn Thill, and Matt Morra University of Idaho. Outline. Background Introduction to Brassicaceae seed meals Justification Greenhouse seed meal extract study. Research at UI.

shoshana
Download Presentation

Using Brassicaceae seed meals and seed meal extracts as bioherbicides

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Using Brassicaceae seed meals and seed meal extracts as bioherbicides Lydia Clayton, Donn Thill, and Matt Morra University of Idaho

  2. Outline • Background • Introduction to Brassicaceae seed meals • Justification • Greenhouse seed meal extract study

  3. Research at UI Interdisciplinary research for obtaining • EPA registration • Use patents for Brassicaceae seed meals (yellow mustard and oriental mustard) and their extracts involving soil, weed, entomology, and plant breeding sciences

  4. % of farmed acres in US certified organic

  5. Number of organic acres farmed per state

  6. Organic Farming Research Foundation, www.ofrf.org

  7. Brassicaceae crops Mustard Rapeseed Canola Broccoli Cauliflower Kale Morra, 2007; Univ. of Idaho

  8. Biological & Agricultural Engineering

  9. 28 – 40%

  10. > 120 Glucosinolate Morra, 2007; Univ. of Idaho

  11. Introduction Glucosinolates • enzymatically degrade into 2° compounds • water soluble anions Glucosinolate + H2O Enzyme (myrosinase)

  12. Introduction • Yellow mustard (Sinapis alba L.) 4-hydroxy-benzyl (~148 μmol/g)Ionic thiocyanate (SCNˉ)(~165 μmol/g) • Canola (Brassica napus L.) 2-hydroxy-3-butenyl, etc.Various breakdown products(~17 μ mol/g)

  13. Justification and Objectives • Management of weeds one of the most expensive and troublesome aspects of organic agricultural production • Greenhouse study designed to analyze water extracts of yellow mustard seed meal as an effective weed management tool

  14. Extraction Experiment

  15. Materials and Methods • Factorial design with 6 doses (0, 0.5, 1, 2, 3, and 4 mt/ha) and 8 treatments: • water alone preemergence (PRE) and postemergence (POST) - dry seed meal PRE - dry seed meal POST - extract alone PRE - extract plus organic surfactant (OS) POST - extract plus nonionic synthetic surfactant (NIS) POST - water plus OS POST, and water plus NIS POST

  16. Materials and Methods • ‘Yaya’ carrot, common lambsquarters, ‘Baronet’ lettuce, and ‘Cabernet’ spring wheat seeded in rows at 20 seeds/flat • Seed meal applied 3 days after seeding for PRE and at 2 leaf stage for POST treatments • Biomass collected 18 DAT for PRE and POST treatments 2 lf stage for POST treatments

  17. Materials and Methods • Statistical analysis -carrot, common lambsquarters, lettuce and wheat biomass • SAS version 9.1 -Non-linear regression techniques

  18. Exponential regression model for biomass analysis Y = A*exp(-B*rate) A - intercept -biomass at a dose = 0 B - rate of change -slope of line between seed meal and seed meal extract doses

  19. Yellow mustard seed meal extraction

  20. Yellow mustard seed meal extraction Spinning! Hydrolyzed seed meal being poured into GE extractor

  21. Yellow mustard seed meal extraction Extract

  22. Yellow mustard seed meal extraction Extract

  23. 0 0.5 1 2 3 4 Carrot biomass by treatment as a percent of control 120 100 80 Biomass, % of average control 60 40 Dry Seed meal post - emergence Dry seed meal pre - emergence 20 Extract alone Extract plus organic surfactant Extract plus synthetic surfactant 0 Dose of yellow mustard seed meal, mt/ha

  24. Extract plus OS Extract plus NIS Seed meal alone Water alone; 3 mt/ha; 14 DAT

  25. GR50 for seed meal and extract treatments on carrot

  26. 0 0.5 1 2 3 4 Common lambsquarters biomass by treatment as a percent of control 120 100 80 Biomass, % of average control 60 40 Dry Seed meal post - emergence Dry seed meal pre - emergence Extract alone 20 Extract plus organic surfactant Extract plus synthetic surfactant 0 Dose of yellow mustard seed meal, mt/ha

  27. Extract plus OS Extract plus NIS Seed meal alone Water alone; 4 mt/ha; 14 DAT

  28. GR50 for seed meal and extract treatments on common lambsquarters

  29. 0 0.5 1 2 3 4 Lettuce biomass by treatment as a percent of control 120 100 80 Biomass, % of average control 60 40 Dry Seed meal post - emergence Dry seed meal pre - emergence Extract alone 20 Extract plus organic surfactant Extract plus synthetic surfactant 0 Dose of yellow mustard seed meal, mt/ha

  30. Extract plus OS Extract plus NIS Seed meal alone Water alone; 2 mt/ha; 14 DAT

  31. GR50 for seed meal and extract treatments on lettuce

  32. Spring wheat biomass by treatment as a percent of control 0 0.5 1 2 3 4 120 100 80 Biomass, % of average control 60 40 Dry Seed meal post - emergence Dry seed meal pre - emergence 20 Extract alone Extract plus organic surfactant Extract plus synthetic surfactant 0 Dose of yellow mustard seed meal, mt/ha

  33. Extract plus OS Extract plus NIS Seed meal alone Water alone; 4 mt/ha; 14 DAT

  34. GR50 for seed meal and extract treatments on spring wheat

  35. Summary

  36. 0.5 1.0 2.0 3.0 4.0

  37. Summary The University of Idaho is continuing to explore novel uses of Brassicaceae seed meals and seed meal byproducts, for biopesticides and other uses.

  38. Acknowledgements • Dr. Thill • Dr. Morra • Dr. Price • Vladimir Borek • USDA - National Research Initiative (NRI) Competitive Grants Program

  39. Questions

More Related