| Literature DB >> 24833234 |
Lyndsay E Saunders1, Melissa B Koontz2, Reza Pezeshki3.
Abstract
Glyphosate, one of the most applied herbicides globally, has been extensively studied for its effects on non-target organisms. In the field, following precipitation, glyphosate runs off into agricultural ditches where it infiltrates into the soil and thus may encounter the roots of vegetation. These edge-of-field ditches share many characteristics with wetlands, including the ability to reduce loads of anthropogenic chemicals through uptake, transformation, and retention. Different species within the ditches may have a differential sensitivity to exposure of the root zone to glyphosate, contributing to patterns of abundance of ruderal species. The present laboratory experiment investigated whether two species commonly found in agricultural ditches in southcentral United States were affected by root zone glyphosate in a dose-dependent manner, with the objective of identifying a sublethal concentration threshold. The root zone of individuals of Polygonum hydropiperoides and Panicum hemitomon were exposed to four concentrations of glyphosate. Leaf chlorophyll content was measured, and the ratio of aboveground biomass to belowground biomass and survival were quantified. The findings from this study showed that root zone glyphosate exposure negatively affected both species including dose-dependent reductions in chlorophyll content. P. hydropiperdoides showed the greatest negative response, with decreased belowground biomass allocation and total mortality at the highest concentrations tested.Entities:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24833234 PMCID: PMC4009795 DOI: 10.3390/biology2041488
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biology (Basel) ISSN: 2079-7737
Figure 1Leaf chlorophyll content index (CCI) values for Polygonum hydropiperoides and Panicum hemitomon. Bars represent treatment means ± SE for 10 and six replicates for P. hydropiperoides and P. hemitomon, respectively. Dark bars represent 1 d pre-exposure values; light bars represent 7 d post-exposure values. Lowercase letters represent significant differences across glyphosate treatments for species (p < 0.05). Note the different scales for CCI for each species.
Figure 2Root-to-shoot biomass ratios (R:S, g/g) for Polygonum hydropiperoides and Panicum hemitomon. Bars represent treatment means ± SE for 10 and six replicates for P. hydropiperoides and P. hemitomon, respectively.
Figure 3Interactive effects of species and glyphosate concentration on survival.