Two-Pass Corn Herbicide Programs Are Almost Always The Best
COLUMBIA, MO.
Regardless of whether you intend to plant a Roundup Ready, Liberty
Link, or conventional corn variety this year, it is important to think
about the type of weed management program you will utilize. Since we
have evaluated a lot of different herbicide programs over the years, I
decided to “mine” our database of research results (www.weedscience.missouri.edu/weedtrials/index.cfm)
in order to understand which program approach is most likely to provide
highest corn yields. Understand that the objective of this “data
mining” exercise was not to compare any one specific herbicide treatment
to another, but rather to compare the different type of herbicide
program approaches one might utilize for weed management in corn.
I was able to make a fair comparison of three different program
approaches that have been evaluated in 61 trials in Missouri over the
past 11 years. What I found was that in 41 of 61, or 67 percent of the
trials, highest corn yields were obtained with a two-pass program that
consisted of a pre-emergence herbicide followed by a post-emergence
herbicide. A one-pass post-emergence program that also contained a
residual herbicide provided highest corn yields in 28 percent of the
trials, whereas in 5 percent of the trials a one-pass pre-emergence
herbicide program provided highest corn yields.
Herbicide Programs that Provided Highest Corn Yields in MU Weed Science Research Trials from 2002-2013
Collectively, what all of this indicates to me is that depending on
the year, environment, soil type, and weed spectrum, either of these
program approaches might work, but year in and year out, the two-pass
herbicide program is most likely to provide the highest levels of weed
control and corn yield. I want to emphasize that the response to these
different programs is likely to vary from one location to another, and
will be highly dependent on the weed spectrum that you have in your
fields. So, if you have been using a one-pass pre-emergence herbicide
program for years and have no complaints, chances are you probably have a
pretty low weed density in your fields, and/or you do not have very
many weed species that germinate later in the season. However, with the
typical spectrum of weeds that we have in Missouri (i.e., cocklebur,
waterhemp, ragweeds, sunflower, foxtails, fall panicum, etc.), our data
show that a post-emergence application is usually required for weeds
that have escaped or germinated since the initial pre-emergence
herbicide application.∆
DR. KEVIN BRADLEY: Associate Professor, Division of Plant Sciences, University of Missouri