4.7 Article Proceedings Paper

New multiple-herbicide crop resistance and formulation technology to augment the utility of glyphosate

Journal

PEST MANAGEMENT SCIENCE
Volume 64, Issue 4, Pages 332-339

Publisher

JOHN WILEY & SONS LTD
DOI: 10.1002/ps.1486

Keywords

glyphosate; crop; weed; ALS; sulfonylurea; imidazolinone; resistance; tolerance; homogeneous blends

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Glyphosate has performed long and well, but now some weed communities are shifting to populations that survive glyphosate, and growers need new weed management technologies to augment glyphosate performance in glyphosate-resistant crops. Unfortunately, most companies are not developing any new selective herbicides with new modes of action to fill this need. Fortunately, companies are developing new herbicide-resistant crop technologies to combine with glyphosate resistance and expand the utility of existing herbicides. One of the first multiple-herbicide-resistant crops will have a molecular stack of a new metabolically based glyphosate resistance mechanism with an active-site-based resistance to a broad spectrum of ALS-inhibiting herbicides. Additionally, new formulation technology called homogeneous blends will be used in conjunction with glyphosate and ALS-resistant crops. This formulation technology satisfies governmental regulations, so that new herbicide mixture offerings with diverse modes of action can be commercialized more rapidly and less expensively. Together, homogeneous blends and multiple-herbicide-resistant crops can offer growers a wider choice of herbicide mixtures at rates and ratios to augment glyphosate and satisfy changing weed management needs. (c) 2007 Society of Chemical Industry.

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