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Never Too Late To Start

Four weed-management tactics you can still implement this year
 
If a management plan for combatting herbicide resistance isn’t part of your operation yet, experts say it’s never too late to start. While there are many steps that farmers can take, weed scientists from around the country say starting with even a few practices can go a long way.
 
weed-out-competition
 
Here are four practices farmers can implement yet this year:
 
1. Start weed-free
 
Before the planter rolls, fields should be weed-free. Whether by cultivation or herbicide burn-down, starting with a clean environment is important.
 
Daniel Stephenson, Louisiana State University AgCenter weed science professor says, “the number one thing is to ensure they have destroyed every plant present, either by tillage or herbicide, so when the seed is planted there is nothing there to inhibit its growth. Most crop plants are sensitive to early competition.”
 
2. Think Pre
 
For the past two decades, many farmers have relied on the practice of controlling weeds solely by using post-emergent herbicides like glyphosate. Experts strongly encourage farmers to hit the weeds before they start to grow.
 
“Incorporate effective pre-emergent herbicides into your practice, using a totally different mode of action,” says Rich Zollinger, professor and weed-control specialist at North Dakota State University. “Weeds haven’t seen a lot of that chemistry, so it can be very effective in controlling resistant weeds.” 
 
Residual control is also valuable to give soybeans and other crops time to reach canopy and shade out weeds.
 
3. Diversify Post 
 
Scientists and experts across the country have long preached the importance of using herbicides with diverse modes of action.
 
“My comment for the past 15 years has been to do practices that keep the weed and insect pressure off balance,” says Minnesota crop consultant Van Larson. “That means to not do the same thing with any one of the control measures available.”
 
Mark Loux, weed scientist at Ohio State University, agrees: “The biggest thing farmers can do to prevent resistance is to use a rotation of chemistries and sites of action. Rotate the basic approach so that you don’t treat the same weeds with the same chemistry every year.”
 
4. Scout
 
Walking fields after applying post-emergent herbicides will reveal whether any resistant weeds have survived. If you find escapees, those plants contain the gene that makes them resistant to the herbicide you used. Show them no mercy.
 
“Be vigilant to see if there are weeds that didn’t die,” Zollinger adds. “If weeds did escape, do what you have to do to kill them and that resistant gene. If you don’t, you’ll have bigger issues.”
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