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Research Explores Factors Influencing Soybean Injury by Synthetic Auxin Herbicides

Research Explores Factors Influencing Soybean Injury by Synthetic Auxin Herbicides

Synthetic auxin products have given growers an important option for managing weed populations resistant to glyphosate and other herbicides. But according to an article featured in the journal Weed Technology, there is one important downside to dicamba, 2,4-D and other synthetic auxins. They often move off-target and can cause severe injury to sensitive plants growing nearby.

Complaints about the issue persist, despite the introduction of products reported to have reduced volatility. For this reason, researchers from the University of Wisconsin-Madison decided to take a close look at factors that might influence synthetic auxin volatility and soybean injury, especially as it applies to the relationship between glyphosate and synthetic auxins commonly used in corn.

Their study found that four out of seven commercial formulations of dicamba and 2,4-D became highly acidic when mixed with glyphosate, which increased their potential for volatility. Glyphosate was shown to have a greater impact on pH than any other spray component or additive.

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LALEXPERT: Sclerotinia cycle and prophylactic methods

Video: LALEXPERT: Sclerotinia cycle and prophylactic methods

White rot, also known as sclerotinia, is a common agricultural fungal disease caused by various virulent species of Sclerotinia. It initially affects the root system (mycelium) before spreading to the aerial parts through the dissemination of spores.

Sclerotinia is undoubtedly a disease of major economic importance, and very damaging in the event of a heavy attack.

All these attacks come from the primary inoculum stored in the soil: sclerotia. These forms of resistance can survive in the soil for over 10 years, maintaining constant contamination of susceptible host crops, causing symptoms on the crop and replenishing the soil inoculum with new sclerotia.