In intensively managed forest plantations in the northern Oregon Coast Range, herbicides are often applied during site preparation and early stand regeneration to reduce competition for resources for planted conifer seedlings. In addition to reducing competition for crop trees, herbicide applications may affect soil processes including decomposition and nutrient cycling,...
Belowground carbon (C) storage and quality of soil organic matter (SOM) in
forest soils have implications for sustainable forest management and C sequestration,
but how these pools change in response to management is poorly understood. I
investigated whether fertilization and competing vegetation control, applied alone or
in combination early in...
Riparian zones of Pacific Northwest forests have high species diversity and abundance and act as an important interface between the aquatic and terrestrial ecosystems. In addition, riparian zones comprise a significant portion of the total buffer zone established during commercial forest production to protect aquatic ecosystems from adjacent management activities....
Sandy soils are among the least productive soils because of their inability to
store adequate water for plant growth. Their high percolation rate not only allows
water to move quickly beyond the root zone, but also washes nutrients below the reach
of plant roots. High evaporation occurs from the soil...
Norflurazon [4-chloro-5-(methylamino)-2(3-(trifluoromethyl)
phenyl)- 3(2H)- pyridazinone] and prodiamine (N3, N3-di-n-propy1-2,4-
dinitro-6-(trifluoromethyl)-m-phenylenediamine) are two herbicides
being considered for weed control in alfalfa. Rotational crops
following alfalfa may be sensitive to residues of these herbicides.
Studies were conducted in Oregon and Washington to examine the soil
persistence and activity of these herbicides on...
The behavior of metribuzin [4-amino-6-(1,1-
dimethylethyl)-3-(methylthio)-1,2,4-triazin-5(4H)-one] and
ethyl-metribuzin (4-amino-6-(1,1-dimethylethyl)-3-
(ethylthio)-1,2,4-triazin-5(4H)-one] in soil was studied to
determine if differences in herbicide behavior in soil could
explain (a) the inconsistent herbicidal activity of these
chemicals and (b) the greater activity of metribuzin, as
compared to ethyl-metribuzin.
Metribuzin had higher activity than ethyl-metribuzin...
Freeze/thaw cycles are numerous in agricultural soils of the Pacific Northwest. Potential loss of soil by erosion is high whenever a soil thaws from the surface creating a saturated soil overlying an impermeable frozen layer. Field studies were conducted to investigate the effect of surface residue on soil freezing. Residue...
Glyphosate (N-(phosphonomethyl)glycine) is an effective
foliar-applied herbicide with broad-spectrum activity. Greenhouse
and laboratory experiments were conducted to determine the
importance of soil moisture, autoclaved soil, soil type, sphagnum
peat, soil pH, added phosphorus, and plant residues on crop
establishment and growth when glyphosate was applied before
emergence of the crop....
Field studies were started at Hyslop Farm, Corvallis,
Oregon in 1984 to determine the soil persistence of the
herbicide clopyralid (3,6-dichloropicolinic acid) under
cropping situations. The herbicide was sprayed on bare soil
at the proposed use rate of 0.14 kg/ha in the spring and on
the same plots at a...
The behavior of six herbicides in soil was studied under controlled laboratory conditions. Sorption of bromacil, chiorotoluron and diuron was assessed by the batch equilibration procedure over a broad range of aqueous phase sorbate concentration. Linear equilibrium sorption constants (K[subscript p]) were slightly higher at 4° C than at 25°...