Scouting And Stewardship
Agronomist Offers Tips For Controlling Resistant Weeds
SIKESTON, MO.
Glyphosate resistant weeds, specifically
Palmer pigweed and common waterhemp,
and ways to control them was a topic discussed
recently by Dr. Anthony Ohmes, Mississippi
County Regional Agronomist.
“These two pigweed species are our predominant
pigweed species here in southeast Missouri,
as well as across the river in Tennessee
and across our state line into Arkansas,” he
said. “It’s become one of our super weeds that
we and our growers are dealing with each year;
and with the rise of glyphosate resistance we’re
relying on products that are in the PPO family of
herbicides and products such as glufosinate (Ignite
or Liberty) in LibertyLink soybean as well.”
The list of available postemergent products is
relatively short. Therefore, stewardship of those
products is super important.
“We must utilize them as
tools, in particular with
Palmer pigweed and waterhemp
we must operate on
the concept of zero tolerance,”
Ohmes added. “We
must eliminate the pigweed
out of the field to reduce the
seed bank, because one of
the weaknesses of Palmer
and waterhemp is they
have a very short seed life,
typically five to six years
maximum. If we can eliminate
the seed production in
the field then that will help
eliminate or reduce the
population that will take
yield from our growers.”
Another area of discussion
was the utilization of
herbicides with different
modes of action. Rotation of
crops and rotation of chemistry
helps for a two-fold
reason.
“One, we don’t want to develop
resistance in the
short list of products that
we do have available to us,
and two, it also helps with
that cultural practice of reducing
that seed population,”
he said.
Ohmes also talked about
timing. Herbicide timing is
essential, especially with
post emerge products.
These products need to be
applied early. So farmers
need to be scouting early,
getting out in the field and
looking for those one- to
two-inch tall pigweeds to
make that application call
for the PPO and Ignite products.
Both of those are contact
herbicides and must be
applied while weeds are
small.
He also talked about overlapping residuals,
utilizing preemerge as either a burn down with
a residual, or a true pre behind the planter.
“We want to utilize residuals. Then if we are
coming back with a post we need to utilize another
residual, be it the residual component in
the PPO, post emergent product or a LibertyLink
system, utilizing a residual tank mix with the
Ignite,” he recommended.
“We want the concept of zero tolerance, overlapping
residuals, scouting early, getting out in
the fields and applying our products post
emerge products as soon as possible, not waiting
for everything to come up,” he urged. “Even
though a product like Ignite is a broad spectrum
herbicide, we don’t want to get back into the
habit of waiting.”
While farmers are intent on suppressing the
proliferance of weeds, they must also be mindful
of their neighbors and the potential for drift.
“We know things can happen,” Ohmes said.
“With a contact chemistry, we need to understand
our products and understand the typical
injury symptoms to various crop plants. A good
plan is to use best management practices to
both avoid resistance and herbicide drift.”
He urged farmers to have a backup plan because
the unexpected can happen.
“With Palmer being a very aggressive and fast
growing weed, there’s a limited number of days,
typically one to three, for applications. So utilize
other resources. If you know you can’t get
across all your beans in that amount of time,
then you need to have some other plan. Things
happen and we need to plan ahead, get things
lined up for the season.
In his take home message, he emphasized
scouting.
“Our growers need to utilize scouting and
identifying weeds properly. Since we’re dealing
with contact herbicides that specifically target
certain weeds, we need to know what those
weeds are,” he said.
“In addition to scouting, we also need to be
good stewards of our products because there
are a limited number of them available, particularly
for our Palmer pigweed and waterhemp,”
Ohmes stressed. “We need to be good stewards
of those products, make sure we’re rotating
them, rotating our crops and just preserving the
limited resources we do have in our weed control
fight.” Δ
BETTY VALLE GEGG-NAEGER: Senior Staff
Writer, MidAmerica Farmer Grower
Dr. Anthony Ohmes,
Agronomist with the
University of Missouri
extension, discussed
glyphosate resistant
weeds and their control.
Photo by John LaRose, Jr.