RT Dissertation/Thesis T1 Investigations on herbicide resistant grass weeds A1 Balgheim,Natalie WP 2010/10/14 AB Weeds are one of the most troublesome threats for farmers, causing high yield losses and serving as hosts for pathogens and insect pests. Since the introduction of chemical weed control agricultural production systems have changed. During the last years the number of herbicide resistant grass weeds is steadily increasing especially in cereal monocultures. These monocultures are characterised by the repeated use of herbicides with the same modes of action and minimum-tillage practices. All these factors can one by one or all together lead to the development of herbicide resistant grass weeds. In general herbicide resistance is the result of heritable changes to biochemical processes that enable plant survival when treated with herbicides. Two different mechanisms are commonly known to confer resistance: target-site resistance and non-target-site resistance. First is the result of an altered target enzyme, where a single point mutation is changing the amino acid structure and exclude herbicide from effectively binding to the target enzyme. The second one, non-target-site resistance, can be summarised as the mechanisms which includes all other mechanisms than target-site resistance, for example rapid metabolic degradation or translocation of herbicides. In Germany, the most trouble causing weeds associated with target-site resistance are the grass weeds Alopecurus myosuroides Huds. and A. spica-venti L. Beauv.. All investigations carried out during this thesis are dealing with those two weed species. Therefore the main objectives of this thesis are the following: To characterise the resistance levels and patterns of both species. To identify the underlying resistance mechanisms. To develop molecular markers for rapid detection of target-site based resistance. To get an idea of the spatial and temporal distribution of herbicide resistant grass weeds in arable fields. Both investigated species are highly adapted to cereals and developed resistance against ACCase and ALS inhibiting herbicides. So they are an increasing problem for German farmers and in consideration of the fact, that both weeds have developed multiple resistances, detecting and management strategies for controlling and preventing of these weeds are absolutely necessary. Carried out dose response relationships proved strong resistance of the A. myosuroides biotype BR(R) against cycloxydim and fenoxaprop, where low resistance was expressed against clethodim. However, biotype BL(R) showed resistance to fenoxaprop and clodinafop only. Dose response experiments carried out with the A. spica-venti biotype showed resistance to sulfosulfuron and iodo-/mesosulfuron. No cross resistances could be detected in both species. The carried out DNA analysis revealed target-site resistance as the underlying resistance mechanism. BR(R) and BL(R) showed well known substitutions: an amino acid change on position 1781 with in the CT domain result in a change of Leu to Ile which confers resistance to APPs and CHDs in the biotype BR(R). The mutation of Gly to Ala on position 2096 within the CT domain causes resistance to APPs only. Also in the A. spica-venti biotype a amino acid change is the responsible resistance mechanism: a change of Pro to Thr at position 197. These sequencing results serve as basis for the development molecular markers. Designed markers based on dCAPS technology. Such markers were developed to detect SNPs which can cause amino acid changes on the constitutive enzymes. Developed markers can rather differentiate between heterozygous and homozygous resistant alleles. Their technology is based on the fact that restriction endonucleases can cut DNA strands on specific recognition sites. This fact can be used for developing markers which are cutting the DNA in a previously generated PCR fragment on the mutation or wild-type sites, respectively. If there is no recognition site, it can be implemented by specific primers during the PCR. By these markers suspicious samples can be analysed and the results give an advice for management strategies, because target- and non-target-site resistance need different controlling strategies. Investigations on the spatial and temporal distribution of weed populations where carried out on an arable field, invested with herbicide resistant A. myosuroides. Collected and analysed leave samples give information about the spatial dynamics of homozygous, heterozygous and sensitive plants in the field. Results show that the distribution of resistant plants depends on the weed density. Besides the weeds are distributed heterogeneous on the field and occur in patches that are persistent over several years. This example revealed that herbicide resistance is rather associated with crop cultivation measurements. Changes in herbicidal and cultivation measurements shall be practiced to control and to prevent the occurrence of herbicide resistant grass weeds. K1 Ungräser K1 Ackerfuchsschwanzgras K1 Resistenz K1 Windhalm K1 SNP PP Hohenheim PB Kommunikations-, Informations- und Medienzentrum der Universität Hohenheim UL http://opus.uni-hohenheim.de/volltexte/2010/485