12.5% triple vinegar: natural herbicide in direct organic maize (Zea mays) plantation

Direct sowing appears as promising in the production of organic corn, the use of cover plants is common. This creates the need to look for alternative substances as natural desiccants. One alternative option is vinegar, which acts as a contact herbicide, destroying the cell membrane, causing drying...

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主要作者: Montero Cedeño, Silvia Lorena (author)
其他作者: Cardoso Galvão, João Carlos (author), Cañarte Bermúdez, Ernesto Gonzalo (author)
格式: article
語言:spa
出版: 2017
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在線閱讀:https://revistasespam.espam.edu.ec/index.php/Revista_ESPAMCIENCIA/article/view/141
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總結:Direct sowing appears as promising in the production of organic corn, the use of cover plants is common. This creates the need to look for alternative substances as natural desiccants. One alternative option is vinegar, which acts as a contact herbicide, destroying the cell membrane, causing drying of the tissues. The objective of this work was to assess the desiccant effect of vinegar (acetic acid) in several doses and its incidence in the agronomic behavior of corn, as well as the richness and abundance of weeds present in the direct sowing system. Black oats (Avena strigosa) were used as a cover crop. Eight treatments were studied: 1) 1120 L.ha-1; 2) 560 L.ha-1 + 560 L.ha-1 24 hours later; 3) 840 L.ha-1; 4) 560 L.ha-1 + 280 L.ha-1 24 hours later; 5) 560 L.ha-1 triple vinegar with 12.5% acetic acid; 6) glyphosate 0.72 L.ha-1; 7) cutting of the oat-black with scraper and 8) oats-black without drying (control). The treatments were applied 30 days after sowing the oats and a week later the corn was planted. The results indicate that the dose of 1120 L.ha-1 of vinegar was the most efficient as a desiccant of the black oats used as a cover crop in the direct sowing system, with 99%, being an alternative as a herbicide in the pro- duction of organic corn. In addition, the vinegar did not affect the emergence rate index of the corn seed, nor the height and diameter of the plant, it didn’t did it show either greater differences in the mass of dry matter of the root nor aerial part of the corn.