West Lafayette, Indiana
December 13, 2004
A new Purdue
University Web page offers farmers general information and
educational materials on dealing with horseweed, a plant that is
infesting parts of Indiana's cropland.
Horseweed,
also known as marestail, has become a major weed control issue
in parts of southern and central
Indiana, said Bill Johnson, Extension weed specialist. Horseweed
is predominantly found in no-tillage crop systems and targets
soybeans, corn, wheat and nurseries.
For more
information on horseweed and to locate areas where horseweed is
glyphosate-resistant, producers, agribusiness specialists and
interested individuals can visit the new Purdue horseweed
science Web site at
http://www.btny.purdue.edu/weedscience/marestail/index.htm .
"The big
problem with horseweed in specific areas is that many
populations are resistant to the herbicide glyphosate used in
Roundup Ready soybean production," Johnson said.
Johnson
said that horseweed competes with crops for moisture, nutrients
and light. Horseweed also can serve as a host to Aster-yellows,
which is a disease that interferes with harvest and provides
unwanted foreign material in the grain.
The first
case of glyphosate resistance in
Indiana
was confirmed in Jackson County in 2002, Johnson said.
"Since 90
percent of the soybean acres in Indiana are planted to Roundup
Ready varieties and 60 percent of soybeans grown utilize no-till
practices, it is very important to find the best alternatives to
help keep horseweed from becoming an even bigger problem and
threat to production agriculture in Indiana," he said.
Purdue
experts advise farmers concerned about horseweed to use
alternative herbicides and/or tillage to control plants before
planting soybeans. Weeds less than six inches tall are much
easier to control than larger plants. The key is to not plant
soybeans in fields with live horseweed. To fight the horseweed
infestation, Johnson recommends the use of other herbicides such
as 2,4-D; dicamba; FirstRate; Classic; Sencor; Python; Valor;
and Authority as preplant herbicides.
If the weed
is already present in fields, Johnson said that the only
effective way to treat the problem is with the addition of
FirstRate or Classic to glyphosate. However, these herbicides
will not be effective if the population also is resistant to
these herbicides as well, he said.
The Web
site was created by Purdue weed science Extension specialists to
provide information on the distribution, biology and management
of glyphosate-resistant horseweed in Indiana and other affected
states. The site includes maps of
Indiana
and surrounding states with confirmed areas that have
glyphosate-resistant horseweed and areas that are currently
being researched and sampled.
The site
frequently updates maps showing locations of
glyphosate-resistant horseweed and the latest research results
on the biology and management of the weed.
Funding for
this research and Extension project was provided by the Indiana
Soybean Board, U.S. Department of Agriculture's Critical and
Emerging Pest Program, Purdue University Ag Research Programs,
Monsanto, Syngenta, Dow Agrosciences, BASF, Valent and Dupont. |