1 / 42

Herbicide Resistant Weeds & Crops: A North American Perspective.

Herbicide Resistant Weeds & Crops: A North American Perspective. Tom Mueller University of Tennessee Knoxville, TN, USA. Overview of presentation. Herbicide resistant crops How widespread? Effect on weed control Effect on development of herbicide resistance Herbicide resistant weeds

oleg
Télécharger la présentation

Herbicide Resistant Weeds & Crops: A North American Perspective.

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Herbicide Resistant Weeds & Crops: A North American Perspective. Tom Mueller University of Tennessee Knoxville, TN, USA

  2. Overview of presentation • Herbicide resistant crops • How widespread? • Effect on weed control • Effect on development of herbicide resistance • Herbicide resistant weeds • Occurrence • Effect on farmers • My Perspective….

  3. My perspective • Herbicide tolerant crops can be an emotional issue • If one wants to see a problem, one will see one • If one does not want to see a problem, one will not see one • As is often the case, we only see what we want to see…..

  4. Defining a few terms • Herbicide Resistant Crop • Genetically Modified Organisms (GMOs) • Transgenic • Herbicide Resistance = • Inherited ability of a weed population to survive and reproduce after exposure to a herbicide dose (rate) that would control an unselected (sensitive) population

  5. Glyphosate Tolerant Crops • RoundupReady (RR) varieties now common in USA • Soybean (>90%) • Cotton (70%) • Corn (~50%, still increasing) • Canola (not a US crop, but in Canada) • Mainly Monsanto Ag Products

  6. Why do US farmers like RR? • The System works!! • Kills many weeds, both small and large • Crop safety, can have overlaps • Safe to people spraying (glyphosate is not toxic) • Monsanto owns seed companies…. • System is simple • One chemical… very easy

  7. Other types of HT crops • LibertyLink Crops (Bayer) • Tolerant to glufosinate • Canola • Corn, soybeans • Some very promising lines

  8. Some resistance to GMOs • In practice, the United States has conducted a large-scale feeding trial • ~300 million US citizens have consumed GMO crops for ~ 12 years. • No negative dietary effects • None… • There is no toxicological reason not to allow GMO crops to be used.

  9. Herbicide Resistant Weeds • Weeds have been adapting to herbicide use for many years • Selection pressure allows for survivors to make seed and fill that open niche

  10. (Conyza canadensis) (Amaranthus palmerii)

  11. Distribution of HR weeds • More prevalent where glyphosate continually used • Cotton/soybean farms • Southeastern United States

  12. Two main weedy species • Conyza canadensis • Winter annual • Amaranthus palmerii • Summer annual

  13. Conyza canadensis • Very widespread • Several million hectares infested • Only a problem in no-tillage systems • Farmers using additional chemicals • 2,4-D/dicamba + flumioxizan prior to planting

  14. (Conyza canadensis)

  15. Photo credit: Chism Craig

  16. Conyza canadensisResistant to glyphosate in TN • Wind-blown seed • Need more herbicides • Need more tillage Photo courtesy of Chism Craig

  17. Amaranthus palmerii • Dioecious summer annual • Prolific seed producer • Can grow 2.5 cm/day in summer • Greatly reduces crop yield

  18. Cotton field 2004 0.8 kg ae/ha glyphosate 14 DAA

  19. West Tennessee 2008 4 kg/ha glyphosate in 1st spray 3 kg/ha glyphosate applied in 2nd application

  20. HR Weeds effect on Farmers • Use more herbicides • In extreme cases, hire people to hoe the fields • Still using RR crop varieties

  21. Other areas • Canada, upper midwest US • Minimal glyphosate Resistance problems • No GMO wheat • GMO canola has several modes of action • 50% RR, 30% LL, 15% Imi, 5% non HT • Can rotate between alternate modes of action • Other weeds have developed resistance • ACCase or ALS resistance

  22. Over the larger area • “Most” farmers have no “major” weed resistance problems • More farmers will have HR weeds in the next few years • As RR corn use increases, will see more HR problems

  23. The most common problem • RR corn “volunteers” in soybeans • A RR crop (corn) becomes a weed in a different RR crop (soybeans)

  24. Do you see RR corn plants?

  25. Final thoughts • HT crops widely used • Few HR weeds, but more each year • Once a farmer gets them, is a major problem

  26. One sees what one wants to see…..

  27. Questions?? • Canada

More Related