Peter M. Eure
University of Georgia
16 Papers
81 Citations
Peter M. Eure is an academic researcher from University of Georgia. The author has contributed to research in topics: Amaranthus palmeri & Glufosinate. The author has an hindex of 7, co-authored 16 publications. Previous affiliations of Peter M. Eure include North Carolina State University.
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Papers
Controlling Glyphosate-Resistant Palmer Amaranth (Amaranthus palmeri) in Cotton with Resistance to Glyphosate, 2,4-D, and Glufosinate
TL;DR: Results from these experiments suggest cotton with resistance to glufosinate, glyphosate, and 2,4-D will improve Palmer amaranth management and should reduce input costs, carryover concerns, and crop injury when compared to current systems.
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Influence of Water Quality and Coapplied Agrochemicals on Efficacy of Glyphosate
Gurinderbir S. Chahal,David L. Jordan,James D. Burton,David A. Danehower,Alan C. York,Peter M. Eure,Bart Clewis +6 more
TL;DR: Glyphosate efficacy was not affected by most water sources, when compared with deionized water, although response was not consistent across all weed species, including cereal rye, common lambsquarters, common ragweed, goosegrass, Italian ryegrass, large crabgrass, Palmer amaranth, tall morningglory, and wheat.
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Time of Application Influences Translocation of Auxinic Herbicides in Palmer Amaranth (Amaranthus palmeri)
Christopher R. Johnston,Peter M. Eure,Timothy L. Grey,A. Stanley Culpepper,William K. Vencill +4 more
TL;DR: Wats et al. as mentioned in this paper evaluated the effect of time of day for application on 2,4-D and dicamba translocation and whether or not altering translocation affected any existing variation in phytotoxicity seen across application times of day.
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Bell Pepper and Weed Response to Dimethyl Disulfide Plus Chloropicrin and Herbicide Systems
TL;DR: Bell pepper were not significantly injured by DMDS plus Pic or napropamide, and a weed management system including the fumigant dimethyl disulfide plus chloropicrin (Pic) plus the herbicide Napropamide prior to transplant followed by S-metolachlor POST may be necessary to replace MBr.
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Salvage Palmer Amaranth Programs Can Be Effective in Cotton Resistant to Glyphosate, 2,4-D, and Glufosinate
TL;DR: In the event of an at-plant residual herbicide failure in fields infested with glyphosate-resistant Palmer amaranth, research demonstrates that glufosinate plus 2,4-D sequentially applied 10 to 15 d apart followed by a timely layby application controlled the target weeds in cotton with resistance to 2, 4-D, glyphosate, and glufOSinate.
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