University of Florida
University of Florida / IFAS Turfgrass Science Fort Lauderdale Research and Education Center
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  Weed Science

Research Interests

Research interests of Phil Busey have included turfgrass breeding and resistance to pests (see below) such as chinch bugs, nematodes, and diseases, and resistance of turfgrasses to environmental stresses such as drought, low fertility, and cold, turfgrass establishment (see below), and weed science (see below), particularly cultural management of weeds, optimization, and alternative herbicides (see below).

While most research has been on warm-season turfgrass, Phil Busey has considerable interest in botany, having worked three years at Missouri Botanical Garden. This resulted in a treatment of the Panamanian Elephantopodinae (Asteraceae), and the discovery of new plant species distributions, and the collection of two species new to science, Begonia buseyi Burt-Utley and Monstera buseyi Croat and Grayum, which are named after him.

Turfgrass breeding by Phil Busey included development of the FX-10, FloraVerde, and NUF-76 cultivars St. Augustinegrasses, Stenotaphrum secundatum. Phil Busey has published more than twice as many scientific papers on St. Augustinegrass as any other scientist, covering many areas of biology and genetics.

Host resistance research has included the discovery of the Floratam damaging (PDP) population of the southern chinch bug, Blissus insularis, the development of an improved bioassay, and population biology of the sting (Belonolaimus longicaudatus) and lance (Hoplolaimus galeatus) nematodes, on St. Augustinegrass. Host resistance research on mole crickets included bermudagrasses and bahiagrass. Other resistance research on bermudagrasses has included tropical sod webworm, and nematodes. Host resistance in zoysiagrass included nematodes.

Turfgrass establishment research included demonstration of a growth model predicting the vegetative establishment of warm-season turfgrasses and optimization studies on the establishment of bahiagrass, Paspalum notatum, for roadside turf.

Cultural management of weeds is a potential alternative to herbicides, but there has been limited research documentation of specific practices in warm-season turfgrasses. Busey has documented the cultural management of weeds such as dollarweed, Hydrocotyle umbellata, in St. Augustinegrass, and is continuing research on combinations of irrigation scheduling and herbicides. He has also developed a goosegrass population model to understand the role of cultural practices and herbicides in golf course and sports turf management.

Optimization of weed control has included the documentation of the field-effective half-life of preemergence herbicides on perennial ryegrass establishment and the development of a mathematical model. One study included a demonstration of the effect of weed control in mixed weed populations of weeds. Problems with herbicides included the issues of persistence by rhizomes of torpedograss, Panicum repens and injury by herbicides to ornamental and vegetable plants.

Research on alternative herbicides included the first scientific paper reporting the use of foramsulfuron (trade name Revolver®) for control of goosegrass, Eleusine indica, in bermudagrass, Cynodon sp., turf. This is important as an alternative to the use of the organic arsenical herbicide MSMA which is subject to a denial of re-registration by the EPA.

Current research interests, besides weed science, are the interaction of humans and the landscape. Phil Busey has conducted limited research on the mowing energy of turfgrasses, the use of informed databases to assist in landscape management, and the study of landscape preference.