Vahl. has been used as a valuable forage crop, but it has also been noted as a weed of winter crops and an invader in several countries. In Argentina, a putative glyphosate-resistant population of was identified as a consequence of the lack of effective control with glyphosate in the pre-sowing of wheat. Plant survival and shikimate accumulation analysis demonstrated a lower glyphosate-sensitivity of this population in comparison to a susceptible population. The resistant population was 4-fold more resistant to glyphosate than its susceptible counterpart. There was no evidence of target-site mechanisms of glyphosate resistance or an enhanced capacity to metabolize glyphosate in the resistant population. However, the resistant plants showed a lower foliar retention of glyphosate (138.34 μl solution g dry weight vs. 390.79 μl solution g dry weight), a reduced absorption of C-glyphosate (54.18 vs. 73.56%) and lower translocation of C-glyphosate from the labeled leaf (27.70 vs. 62.36%). As a result, susceptible plants accumulated a 4.1-fold higher concentration of C-glyphosate in the roots compared to resistant plants. The current work describes the first worldwide case of glyphosate resistance in . A reduced foliar retention of herbicide, a differential rate of glyphosate entry into leaves and an altered glyphosate translocation pattern would be the most likely mechanisms of glyphosate exclusion.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7930564PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpls.2021.617945DOI Listing

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