See more from this Session: Turf and Pest Management
Monday, November 1, 2010: 2:45 PM
Long Beach Convention Center, Room 102B, First Floor
Seashore paspalum [Paspalum vaginatum (Sw.)] is used on golf courses in warm temperate regions but prolific growth and seedhead development may reduce turfgrass quality. Field experiments were conducted to investigate efficacy of flazasulfuron and trinexapac-ethyl on seashore paspalum seedhead suppression, clipping reduction, and canopy height. Clipping reductions and seedhead suppression from nontreated increased with flazasulfuron rate from 4.5 to 27 g ai/ha by two to four weeks after treatment. Trinexapac-ethyl at 96 g ai/ha alone provided erratic levels of seedhead suppression but reduced clippings by ≈ 50 to 75% from nontreated by two to four weeks after treatment. On several dates, trinexapac-ethyl enhanced clipping reductions and seedhead suppression from flazasulfuron. Trinexapac-ethyl exacerbated seashore paspalum injury from high flazasulfuron rates on several dates but injury never exceeded 23%. Seashore paspalum height was reduced by 50% from trinexapac-ethyl in unmowed areas after eighteen weeks. Flazasulfuron at 18 or 27 g/ha with trinexapac-ethyl provided consistent seedhead suppression and clipping reductions ranging ≈ 70 to 95% of nontreated. These tank-mixtures have promising implications for use in seashore paspalum golf course fairways.
See more from this Division: C05 Turfgrass ScienceSee more from this Session: Turf and Pest Management