Chickpeas Dry Beans Faba Beans Fenugreek Lentils Peas Soybeans Field Management Weeds
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By Jennifer Bogdan, PAg, CCA

Pulse crops can be very sensitive in their susceptibility to herbicides. Herbicide injury can result from herbicide drift, herbicide carryover in the soil, residual herbicides used at incorrect rates or on improper soil types, contamination of the sprayer tank or nozzle components, miscalibration of sprayer equipment, or sprayer overlap.

Symptoms of herbicide injury can be confused with symptoms caused by environmental or physiological stress on the plant such as frost, hail, or wind damage, excessive moisture, drought, heat stress, plant diseases, nutrient deficiency or toxicity, and fertilizer burn. Refer to Environmental Stresses in Pulses for more information.

Careful examination of the above and below-ground symptoms as well as detailed collection and analysis of all cropping information must be considered before determining the cause of an unhealthy plant.

Group 2 Herbicides

Accidental application of imazamox (Group 2) + imazapyr (Group 2) to field peas (not registered). Crop yellowing and stunting are easily seen from the field view in the sprayed area compared to the unsprayed.
Source: Jennifer Bogdan
Yellowing of the new growth in peas from pyroxsulam (Group 2) drift.
Source: Emile deMilliano
Main stem growing point on field pea damaged by flucarbazone (Group 2) residue in the sprayer, causing secondary branches to form.
Source: Jennifer Bogdan
Injury to main growing point by flucarbazone (Group 2) residue in the sprayer, causing excessive branching or “stooling” at the base of the pea plant.
Source: Jennifer Bogdan
Shortened internodes can be seen as Group 2 herbicides affect the growing points, pictured here on field pea.
Source: Clark Brenzil, Saskatchewan Agriculture
Short, stubby tendrils and interveinal chlorosis (yellowing) of new growth in field pea from flucarbazone (Group 2) residue in the soil.
Source: Scott Anderson
Registered in-crop Group 2 herbicides may cause a “yellow flash” on field peas and faba beans. The pea plant on the left was unsprayed and the pea on the right was sprayed with imazamox (Group 2) + imazethapyr (Group 2). Photo taken one day after application.
Source: Jennifer Bogdan
Reduced leaf development, shortened plant height, and “stooling” on faba bean from metsulfuron (Group 2) carryover in the soil.
Source: Eric Johnson, University of Saskatchewan
Shortened internodes on stem of faba bean affected by flucarbazone (Group 2) carryover in the soil (left) compared to the healthy faba bean stem (right).
Source: Eric Johnson, University of Saskatchewan
Excessive branching at the base of faba bean and reduced height in plant due to flucarbazone (Group 2) carryover in the soil (left), compared to healthy faba bean (right).
Source: Eric Johnson, University of Saskatchewan
Flucarbazone (Group 2) carryover in the soil affecting the two pea plants on the right, compared to an unaffected pea plant on the left. Injured plants show stunted growth, yellowing at the top of the main stems, and branching at the base of the plants.
Source: Jennifer Bogdan
Soil applied imazethapyr (Group 2) to chickpea, with the unsprayed control on the left and the injured on the right showing excessive branching.
Source: Clark Brenzil, Saskatchewan Agriculture
Unaffected chickpea plant (left) and injured plants (right) showing yellowing from imazethapyr (Group 2) applied as a pre-seed burn-off. Source: Jennifer Bogdan

Group 4 Herbicides

Bent stems due to a late application of MCPA (Group 4) on field peas.
Source: Jennifer Bogdan
Twisted, yellowed, and necrotic (dead) tendrils from 2,4-D (Group 4) sprayed on peas.
Source: Jennifer Bogdan
Swollen and split stem at base of pea plant due to clopyralid (Group 4) injury.
Source: Clark Brenzil, Saskatchewan Agriculture
Puckered and claw-like growth of new leaves from clopyralid (Group 4) injury on faba bean.
Source: Eric Johnson, University of Saskatchewan
Leaf cupping and interveinal chlorosis (yellowing) on faba bean from quinclorac (Group 4) residue in the soil.
Source: Eric Johnson, University of Saskatchewan
Reduced leaf growth, abnormal leaf formation, and interveinal chlorosis (yellowing) on faba bean from quinclorac (Group 4) injury.
Source: Sherrilyn Phelps, Saskatchewan Pulse Growers
Interveinal chlorosis (yellowing) and puckered margin on faba bean leaf (left) injured by quinclorac (Group 4) compared to uninjured leaf (right). Source: Sherrilyn Phelps, Saskatchewan Pulse Growers
Leaf cupping of younger trifoliate leaves from dicamba (Group 4) injury on non-tolerant soybeans.
Source: Jennifer Bogdan

Group 5 and 6 Herbicides

Metribuzin (Group 5) injury on lentil at labelled rate. Minor crop tolerance issues can occur when metribuzin is applied under stressful growing conditions. Bleached and burned-off leaf margins can be seen on the leaves that were present at the time of application.
Source: Brianna Zoerb, University of Saskatchewan
Metribuzin (Group 5) applied to lentils at 20x rate. Plant tissue becomes bleached and appears burned-off.
Source: Brianna Zoerb, University of Saskatchewan
Metribuzin (Group 5) injury on chickpea, with bleached leaf margins appearing on older leaves that were present at the time of application. Source: Eric Johnson, University of Saskatchewan
Metribuzin (Group 5) moves to the leaf margins where bleaching symptoms first appear (after foliar application in chickpea).
Source: Eric Johnson, University of Saskatchewan
Injury to lentils from accidental application of bentazon (Group 6).
Source: Sherrilyn Phelps, Saskatchewan Pulse Growers
Injured chickpea (bottom) from in-crop application of linuron (Group 5).
Source: Rick Holm, University of Saskatchewan

Group 9 (glyphosate)

Glyphosate (Group 9) drift from glyphosate-tolerant canola (left) onto pea field (right). Yellowing of the pea crop is very noticeable.
Source: Emile deMilliano
Yellowing of growing points and new growth on peas from glyphosate (Group 9) drift.
Source: Emile deMilliano
Glyphosate (Group 9) injury from a post-seeding application when peas were just emerging from the soil (ground-crack). Affected plants show yellowing of the new growth at the top of the plants.
Source: Jennifer Bogdan
In addition to yellowed new growth, glyphosate (Group 9) injury from spraying at ground-crack can cause abnormal plant formation, with reduced leaves and branching due to a severely affected main growing point, seen here in field pea seedlings.
Source: Jennifer Bogdan
Abnormal pea seedling, grown from a seedlot that had been sprayed with pre-harvest glyphosate (Group 9), showing reduced leaf development and branching.
Source: Jennifer Bogdan
Abnormal pea seeds (right) from a seedlot sprayed with pre-harvest glyphosate (Group 9) compared with a healthy pea plant (left).
Source: Jennifer Bogdan

Group 10 (glufosinate ammonium)

Group 14 Herbicides

Sulfentrazone (Group 14) injury on lentils from a pre-seed application. Affected leaves appear bleached and desiccated before browning off and dying.
Source: Eric Johnson, University of Saskatchewan
Pre-seed sulfentrazone (Group 14) on lentils in the front plot and untreated lentils (check) in the back plot. Reduced plant growth and severe plant stand thinning are evident.
Source: Eric Johnson, University of Saskatchewan
Injury to lentil seedling from a pre-seed application of the high rate of saflufenacil (Group 14). The hypocotyl becomes pinched and restricted, leading to browning of new shoot tissue. Severe damage can kill the seedling near the time of emergence.
Source: Brianna Zoerb, University of Saskatchewan
Injury to lentils from the high rate of saflufenacil (Group 14) applied pre-seed, showing bleaching of the leaves. New growth is healthy as it outgrows the injury.
Source: BASF

Group 15 Herbicides

Pyroxasulfone (Group 15) injury to lentils causes yellowing, purpling, leaf cupping, and stunted growth.
Source: Eric Johnson, University of Saskatchewan
Shoot regrowth from underground scale nodes following pyroxasulfone (Group 15) injury to main shoot in lentil.
Source: Eric Johnson, University of Saskatchewan

Group 22 (diquat)

  • Diquat is strictly a contact herbicide that enters the plant through the leaves (foliar uptake). There is no residual soil activity with diquat.
  • Diquat is a photosystem I (PS I) inhibitor and works by diverting electrons to oxygen, creating toxic oxygen radicals that disrupt proteins and lipids. Cell membranes become leaky and plant tissue dries up before dying. The fast activity of diquat makes it useful as a crop desiccant.
  • Initial symptoms of wilting, spotting, and interveinal chlorosis (yellowing) appear as soon as a few hours after application under sunny conditions. Plant tissue appears bleached and eventually turns brown and/or black as plant death occurs.
Diquat (Group 22), pictured here on chickpea, is a contact herbicide that causes bleaching of tissue and is used in pulse crops as a desiccant.
Source: Rick Holm, University of Saskatchewan

Group 27 Herbicides

Pyrasulfotole (Group 27) carryover in lentils, showing whitening on the new leaves.
Source: Sherrilyn Phelps, Saskatchewan Pulse Growers
Pyrasulfotole (Group 27) carryover in faba beans. In pulse crops, pyrasulfotole injury symptoms first appear as whitening along the leaf margins, before moving inward across the remainder of the leaf.
Source: Sherrilyn Phelps, Saskatchewan Pulse Growers
Pyrasulfotole (Group 27) injury in field peas from herbicide carryover on knolls where the soil parameters (pH and organic matter) fell outside of the label restrictions. Pyrasulfotole injury causes bleaching of the new leaves. Source: Jennifer Bogdan
Field pea showing both pyrasulfotole (Group 27, whitening of new leaves) and tribenuron (Group 2, excessive branching at base of plant) injury from soil residual carryover. Injured plants were found on knolls where the soil was low in organic matter and high in pH, and recropping restrictions on the herbicide labels were not met.
Source: Jennifer Bogdan
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