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Bibliography Tag: weed management systems

Behrens et al., 2007

Mark Behrens, Nedim Mutlu, Sarbani Chakraborty, Razvan Dumitru, Wen Zhi Jiang, “Dicamba Resistance: Enlarging and Preserving Biotechnology-Based Weed Management Strategies,” Science, 316, 2007, DOI: 10.1126/science.1141596.

ABSTRACT:

Abstract: The advent of biotechnology-derived, herbicide-resistant crops has revolutionized farming practices in many countries. Facile, highly effective, environmentally sound, and profitable weed control methods have been rapidly adopted by crop producers who value the benefits associated with biotechnology-derived weed management traits. But a rapid rise in the populations of several troublesome weeds that are tolerant or resistant to herbicides currently used in conjunction with herbicide-resistant crops may signify that the useful lifetime of these economically important weed management traits will be cut short. We describe the development of soybean and other broadleaf plant species resistant to dicamba, a widely used, inexpensive, and environmentally safe herbicide. The dicamba resistance technology will augment current herbicide resistance technologies and extend their effective lifetime. Attributes of both nuclear- and chloroplast-encoded dicamba resistance genes that affect the potency and expected durability of the herbicide resistance trait are  examined.  FULL TEXT

Steil, 2017

Mark Steil, “State investigating Monsanto weed killer after farmers’ complaints,” MPRnews, July 20, 2017.

SUMMARY:

Reports on about 2 dozen complaints received by the Minnesota Department of Agriculture about damage from dicamba.  The debate continues over what’s to blame- farmers spraying improperly or on the wrong weather days, the use of generic formulations that lack the additives to reduce volubility, or Monsanto’s product itself.  Lab tests are being conducted on the affected crops to determine if dicamba is to blame.  Estimates are that thousands of acres of soybeans across MN have been damaged.  FULL TEXT

Gray, 2017a

Bryce Gray, “Class lawsuit takes aim at dicamba producers, accuses Monsanto reps of condoning illegal spraying,” St. Louis Post-Dispatch, July 23, 2017.

SUMMARY:

This article reports on the class action lawsuit filed July 18th in federal court in Monsanto’s home state of Missouri.   The lawsuit claims that despite public statements urging farmers to wait for the new, low-volubility dicamba formulations, Monsanto privately assured farmers that off-label use wouldn’t be harmful.   The suit names Monsanto, BASF, DuPont, and Pioneer as the defendants, and the plaintiffs currently include seven farms in Arkansas, though many more are expected to join.   In reviewing the 2017 batch of dicamba damage complaints, the article claims that as well as Arkansas and Missouri, Tennessee, Mississippi, Kansas, Illinois and Indiana have all seen problems from dicamba use.   FULL TEXT

Associated Press, 2017a

Associated Press, “Arkansas governor approves board’s limits on dicamba use,” The Washington Times, January 4, 2017.

SUMMARY:

Reports that Gov. Hutchinson has approved the Arkansas State Plant Board’s proposal to limit when and where dicamba can be sprayed in the upcoming planting season.  It includes a requirement for a 1 mile buffer zone before spraying dicamba, except on pasture or rangeland. FULL TEXT

Demillo, 2017

Andrew Demillo, “Weed Killer Turns Neighbor Against Neighbor in Farm Country,” Associated Press, July 17, 2017.

SUMMARY:

This AP article sheds light on Mike Wallace, the Arkansas farmer who was shot and killed in October 2016  by the manager of the neighboring farm during a confrontation over damage to Wallace’s farm from dicamba drift.  Mike’s sister said that he “did not want to hurt his neighbor, and he could not understand why people would spray things that would hurt others.”    The article reports that as of mid July, 630 complaints have been received so far at the Plant Board, far surpassing the 250 or so that or usually submitted each year.   Herbicide manufactures continue to insist the problem is with application error, and not their products.  “I’ve never seen anything like this,” quotes one long-time soybean farmer.  FULL TEXT

BASF, 2016b

BASF Press Release, “Engenia herbicide from BASF now registered by EPA,”  Farm Industry News, 2016.

SUMMARY:

BASF press release about EPA approval of Engenia herbicide for dicamba-tolerant soybean and cotton.  Includes claims of a 70% reduction in volatility.  FULL TEXT

Laws, 2016

Forrest Laws, “EPA issues highly-restricted label for new dicamba formulation,” Delta FarmPress, November 8, 2016.

SUMMARY:

The EPA approves dicamba for use on herbicide-resistant crops.  The formulation approved is for use with Monsanto’s new Xtendimax with Vapor Grip Technology, which contains additives intended to decrease volubility and reduce drift.  FULL TEXT

Jibben, 2016

Betsy Jibben, “Farmers Waiting for EPA Approval of Dicamba,” AgWeb, November 7, 2016.

SUMMARY:

A mess was created in 2016 when Monsanto began selling its dicamba-tolerant Xtend soybeans before the herbicide designed to use with the GE seeds was approved by the EPA.  Farmers bought the seed anyway because of its high yield.   Some farmers sprayed dicamba anyways, an illegal off-label use, resulting in 40,000 acres of damage from drift in Missouri alone.  FULL TEXT

Manley, 2016

Marci Manley, “AR Man Shot Dead in Farm Dispute,” KARK NBC 4 News Broadcast, October 28, 2016, posted at www.arkansasmatters.com,

SUMMARY:

In a shocking turn of events, farmer-to-farmer conflict over dicamba drift from off-label herbicide use ended in murder when a man was shot during a meeting about damaged crops. FULL TEXT

Charles, 2016

Dan Charles, “How Monsanto And Scofflaw Farmers Hurt Soybeans In Arkansas, ” NPR, August 1, 2016.

SUMMARY:

NPR story describes the illegal spraying of dicamba on soybean fields in Arkansas where Monsanto began selling its Xtend dicamba-resistant soybeans before the EPA had approved the new dicamba herbicide formulation for use with the GE seeds.  Monsanto said farmers wanted the seed anyway because of higher yields, but many chose to illegally spray older dicamba formulations that were prone to drift.  FULL TEXT

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