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ARS Home » Southeast Area » Houma, Louisiana » Sugarcane Research » Research » Publications at this Location » Publication #223774

Title: Combined glyphosate-ripener and residue blanket stresses reduce ratoon yields in Louisiana

Author
item Viator, Ryan
item Dalley, Caleb
item Johnson, Richard
item Richard Jr, Edward

Submitted to: Sugar Journal
Publication Type: Trade Journal
Publication Acceptance Date: 2/18/2008
Publication Date: 2/20/2008
Citation: Viator, R.P., Dalley, C.D., Johnson, R.M., Richard Jr, E.P. 2008. Combined glyphosate-ripener and residue blanket stresses reduce ratoon yields in Louisiana. Sugar Journal. 70(8):6.

Interpretive Summary:

Technical Abstract: Failure to remove the blanket of residue generated during green-cane harvesting and certain glyphosate ripener application regimes have independently been shown to reduce yields of the subsequent ratoon crop of Louisiana’s leading variety LCP 85-384. The objectives of this experiment were to determine residual glyphosate effects in ratoon crops of three newly released varieties Ho 95-988, HoCP 96-540, and L 97-128 following an application the previous year and to investigate if the stress associated with the application of glyphosate is compounded by the presence of post-harvest residue at the start of the growing season. The combination of a ripener application of glyphosate to the first-ratoon crop and the failure to remove the residue blanket generated during the harvest of the first-ratoon crop reduced the sugar yields of the subsequent second-ratoon crop by 21% (3150 kg/ha) compared to treatments where glyphosate was not applied and the residue was removed within two weeks of harvest. On the other hand, where ripener was not used, post-harvest residue retention lowered sugar yields by 6% (920 kg/ha) compared to plots where the residue was removed. This sugar loss was primarily due to lower cane tonnage (103.3 Mg/ha) where both ripener and residue stresses were imposed verses just the residue stress (116.3 Mg/ha). Where residue was removed by burning, ripener application did not reduce sugar yields compared to where ripener was not used. To optimize ratoon crop yields, Louisiana farmers should remove post-harvest residue as soon after harvest as possible especially if ripener was applied the previous season. In areas where residue cannot be removed growers should consider not applying a ripener because of the compounded effects of these two stresses.