Heart Mountain Reality

Weekly Poll

Should Wyoming bring its wolf plan in line with surrounding states?
 

Weather

State Farm

Today's Front Page

Advertisement

Sports

Advertisement

Family

Advertisement

Business Directory

Advertisement
Advertisement

Home arrow News arrow Roundup resistance
Roundup resistance Print E-mail
Written by Judy Killen    Thursday, July 15, 2010

As tolerance evolves, UW researcher tests other herbicides

Farmers have hailed the development of crops such as sugar beets and alfalfa that tolerate applications of Roundup without damage.

Roundup Ready crops aren’t harmed by Roundup, which kills weeds along with most broad-leafed plants. That usually allows growers to apply it to replace several applications of other herbicides. Its use can reduce fuel costs and carries other benefits since, unlike other herbicides, Roundup leaves no soil residue. 

Unfortunately, some weeds are starting to show resistance to Roundup, which means growers may have to try other herbicide treatments, said Andrew Kniss, a University of Wyoming researcher. But some herbicides also may damage crops, he said, so he’s set up experiments to test plant damage from herbicide applications.

Kniss said at least three weed species have evolved tolerance to Roundup and that kochia has been reported in some parts of the country.

“If we get Roundup resistant kochia (weeds) up here,” Kniss said, “what are we going to do?”

Kniss is running test plots at the UW Powell Research and Extension Center just north of Powell to try new herbicide combinations. At last week’s annual field day at the research center, Kniss said he and a team of graduate students are using aerial imagery to try to calculate whether applying different herbicides injures Roundup Ready beets.

“Roundup doesn’t injure beets, but the other herbicides can,” he said.

Targets mark areas of the test plots. Kniss works with a pilot from a North Dakota company to create aerial images that Kniss can use to evaluate effects of different application rates and timing of those applications.

“Maybe for some weeds, Roundup is eventually going to fail,” Kniss said. In the meantime, he’s testing other herbicides including Norton, Dual and Mon63410, developed by Monsanto Co.
Comments
Add New
Ms.
Mary Keller (72.175.44.xxx) 2010-07-15 12:50:23

I'm wondering if Judy Killen might do any follow-up articles regarding a Michael
Pollan type analysis of the problems created when we keep beefing up the
herbicides in a race with weeds, producing Super Weeds. Monocultures create
this problem by their very nature, whether it is in cow cities, pig cities, or
beet cities. Rod Morrison at Common Ground Ranch is a local voice for thinking
critically about these issues. See also the documentary film "Fresh" and
"Food, Inc." See also http://michaelpollan.com/books
/in-defense-of-food/
Thanks for the good ag reporting,
Mary
Write comment
Name:
Email:
 
Title:
UBBCode:
[b] [i] [u] [url] [quote] [code] [img] 
 

3.26 Copyright (C) 2008 Compojoom.com / Copyright (C) 2007 Alain Georgette / Copyright (C) 2006 Frantisek Hliva. All rights reserved."

 
< Prev   Next >
YRA
WREN
Real Estate Connection
Video Experience
Mountain West Computers
© 2010 Powell Tribune
Joomla! is Free Software released under the GNU/GPL License.