Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Fabricating supramolecular pre-emergence herbicide CPAM-BPyHs for farming herbicide-resistant rice.
- Year:
- 2025
- Authors:
- Chen R et al.
- Affiliation:
- College of Plant Protection · China
Abstract
Controlling weeds before their emergence is crucial for minimizing their impacts on crop yield and quality. Bipyridyl herbicides (BPyHs), a class of highly effective and broad-spectrum herbicides, cannot be used as pre-emergence herbicides because they can be absorbed and inactivated by negatively charged soil after application. Here, we design and fabricate an adsorbed-but-active supramolecular pre-emergence herbicide consisting of cationic polyacrylamide and bipyridyl herbicides (CPAM-BPyHs). CPAM is a positively charged polymer. It can preferentially bind to soil particles and shift their electric potential to a more positive value. Thus, it prevents not only runoff but also inactivation of BPyHs. We also develop a BPyHs-resistant rice line by mutation of the gene encoding L-type amino acid transporter 5 (OsLAT5). Field trial results show that the weed control efficiency of CPAM-diquat for direct-seeded herbicide-resistant rice line exceeds 90%. The herbicidal activity can maintain up to one month with only one application. This work offers a method for rice weed control and provides insights into the design of pesticides to prevent soil inactivation and runoff.
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Search related cases →Original publication: https://europepmc.org/article/MED/40348750