St. Louis, Missouri
February 13, 2001
The National Corn Growers Association (NCGA) is urging growers who
planted StarLink hybrids last year to make the extra effort to control possible volunteer StarLink
corn in 2001. That may mean rotating to another crop or growing an herbicide-tolerant hybrid that lets you control volunteer StarLink.
"The danger is volunteer StarLink corn pollinating surrounding non- StarLink corn plants, further compounding the problems of keeping
StarLink out of the supply of U.S. corn," said Fred Yoder, Plain City, Ohio, farmer and chairman of the NCGA Biotech Working Group.
"Rotation is the best choice," he pointed out. "In an ideal situation for 2001, you'd rotate ground planted to StarLink last year into
soybeans, oats, or some other crop that will allow you to find and destroy volunteer corn.
"But if you're locked into growing corn-on-corn you need to plant herbicide-tolerant hybrids that let you eliminate StarLink volunteers,"
Yoder stressed.
The other control options are to grow either glyphosate (Roundup Ready) tolerant hybrids or imidazolinone (IMI) Clearfield tolerant
hybrids and then use those herbicides to kill volunteer corn and other weeds.
However, NCGA is warning farmers about the use of Roundup Ready hybrids to control StarLink volunteers. "Roundup Ready corn is
not yet approved for export to the European Union and is restricted from some domestic wet-milling markets," Yoder emphasized.
"Check your primary corn market before selecting this control option.
"Planting glufosinate (LibertyLink) tolerant hybrids or using conventional corn herbicides on StarLink ground will not control volunteers,
because StarLink contains the LibertyLink gene," he added. "Also, you'll need to check with your seed dealer to see whether the
StarLink hybrids you planted last year were stacked with IMI. If they were, you can't control volunteer StarLink with an IMI hybrid."
The recommendation on controlling StarLink volunteers is in addition to NCGA's recent statement encouraging growers to plant seed
that has been tested for Cry9C, the StarLink protein.
For more information about the National Corn Growers Association and biotechnology, visit the NCGA website at
http://www.ncga.com .
The National Corn Growers Association mission is to create and increase opportunities for corn growers in a changing world and to
enhance corn's profitability and usage. NCGA represents more than 30,000 members, 25 affiliated state corn grower organizations and
the interests of hundreds of thousands of growers who contribute to state checkoff programs.
NCGA news release
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