Herbicide

Legal experts weigh in on the use of dicamba

by George Jared (gjared@talkbusiness.net)

One of the most controversial topics in the agriculture industry is the use of the herbicide dicamba. Many state and federal policies regarding dicamba have changed in recent years including a federal court decision in Arizona that questions the future use of over-the-top dicamba products. The three products targeted are XtendiMax, Engenia and Tavium.

“The Feb. 6 decision from the U.S. District Court of Arizona was another major development in the ongoing saga impacting producers’ methods for protecting their crops,” Brigit Rollins, staff attorney for the National Agricultural Law Center, said. “Pending a possible appeal, producers will not be able to rely on over-the-top dicamba as they may have in the past.”

A week after the court ruling, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) issued a notice that it would still allow producers to use existing stocks of over-the-top dicamba during the upcoming growing season.

Legal experts weigh in on the use of dicamba

Researchers test nanotechnology concept against herbicide ‘drift’

by George Jared (gjared@talkbusiness.net)

One of the most controversial issues in Arkansas agriculture is the use of the herbicide dicamba. It is one of the few herbicides that is still effective against pigweed, a pervasive weed that impacts many row crop fields in the Delta.

The problem with dicamba is that it is prone to drift onto adjacent fields and can cause serious damage to crops that haven’t been genetically modified to use the herbicide. Scientists in the Natural State are researching a new solution to this generations-long problem.

The startup CelluDot will receive a nearly $1 million National Science Foundation grant to optimize a nanotechnology product developed by the scientists of the company when they were doctoral students. The goal is to mitigate herbicide drift, and the ongoing research will be done in partnership with the Arkansas Agricultural Experiment Station.

https://talkbusiness.net/2023/09/researchers-test-nanotechnology-concept-against-herbicide-drift/

Division of Agriculture demonstrates one possible ‘future of weed control’

By Ryan McGeeney
U of A System Division of Agriculture

KEISER, Ark. — The future of weed control may come down to selectivity.

Using visual recognition and machine learning to selectively spray pesticides in crop fields, versus simply broadcasting chemicals over an entire area, is the core concept behind a technology that researchers with the University of Arkansas System Division of Agriculture have been evaluating for several years.

On Aug. 23, growers, consultants and other agriculture industry professionals had the opportunity to see an iteration of that technological concept in action at the Division of Agriculture’s Northeast Research and Extension Center at Keiser in northeast Arkansas.

COVERED — Water containing blue dye is broadcast from a tractor boom during a demonstration of John Deere's See & Spray Ultimate technology, which can use machine learning to selectively spray herbicide on weeds in row crops. The demonstration was held at the Division of Agriculture's research facility at Keiser, Arkansas. (Division of Agriculture photo.)

The system, known as See & Spray Ultimate, uses a series of digital cameras mounted on 120-foot booms affixed to a tractor to identify and spot-spray weeds in post-emergent applications. The original concept was developed by Blue River Technology in California to thin lettuce patches. When John Deere acquired Blue River about five years ago, the concept was expanded to identify and eradicate weeds in row crop agriculture.

Jason Norsworthy, distinguished professor of weed science for the Division of Agriculture, has been evaluating the system in test plots at the Keiser Research Station since 2017. Norsworthy, whose work is part of the Arkansas Agricultural Experiment Station, the Division of Agriculture’s research arm, said that between growing resistance to existing chemistries and increasing environmental concern, technologies like the See & Spray are likely to become increasingly necessary in row crop agriculture.

“Each year, we’re losing herbicides because of environmental contamination,” he said. “Being able to place the herbicide where the weed actually is will make those herbicides more efficient.”

During Tuesday’s demonstration, a John Deere employee drove a tractor over a cotton test plot, spraying water with blue dye over the rows using nozzles on a 120-foot tractor boom. The purpose was to demonstrate the system’s coverage at both relatively low and high weed detection settings and tractor speeds.

Norsworthy discussed typical reductions in herbicide consumption using both broadcast and selective “spot” spraying, as well as additional ramifications of each approach.

“I don’t think that this technology is going to be one to allow us to take the residual herbicides out of the post-emergence applications, but it is going to put more emphasis on trying to keep those fields clean, and in doing so, I think there’s considerable cost savings that can result when we have strong residuals,” he said. “I think what we’ve seen today is the first of many more iterations to come. It’s really the platform — as the software and computer speed evolves, I think we’re going to see further advancements in terms of being able to locate and identify weeds and properly target that spray application.”

After the tractor demonstration, Tom Barber, extension weed scientist for the Division of Agriculture, moderated a panel discussion that addressed questions about the See & Spray Ultimate technology. The panel included Norsworthy, Tom several John Deere and Blue River Technology representatives and several Arkansas farmers.

Travis Senter, a Mississippi County farmer who had participated in evaluating the technology, said it took some getting used to.

“We used the sprayer on several crops,” Senter said. “We used it on rice … we used it on some beans, but mostly we used it on cotton. It’s got its place.

“It took us a while for my driver to kind of get acclimated to it,” he said. “We were actually a little scared of it. And once we got in it and got going, it works good.”

Chad Yagow, John Deere business agronomy lead for the See & Spray Ultimate system, said the company has been working with four land grant universities, including the University of Arkansas, to develop and improve the technology, as well as running mirror trials with a contract research firm in Mississippi.

Yagow said 50 units will be available for purchase in 2023. In 2024, John Deere plans to release more units to the open market, based on consumer demand. Pricing details for the system will be released to the public through John Deere dealers on Sept. 15, he said.

To learn about extension programs in Arkansas, contact your local Cooperative Extension Service agent or visit www.uaex.uada.edu. Follow us on Twitter and Instagram at @AR_Extension. To learn more about Division of Agriculture research, visit the Arkansas Agricultural Experiment Station website: https://aaes.uada.edu/. Follow on Twitter at @ArkAgResearch. To learn more about the Division of Agriculture, visit https://uada.edu/. Follow us on Twitter at @AgInArk.

Arkansas researchers to join efforts to tackle herbicide resistant weed problem

by George Jared (gjared@talkbusiness.net)

Herbicide resistant weeds are a significant threat to the Arkansas agriculture sector and scientists with the Arkansas Agricultural Experiment Station are about to study new methods for dealing with this problem. Catching weed seeds before they start a new generation of herbicide-resistant plants is the tactic behind a relatively new method in the U.S. that weed scientists in Arkansas, Iowa, Kansas and Missouri have partnered to investigate.

“When you take a look at weed management in general, it’s all really centered around soil seed bank management,” said Jason Norsworthy, Distinguished Professor of weed science with the experiment station, the research arm of the University of Arkansas System Division of Agriculture. “If we can drive those soil seedbanks down it’s going to benefit us in terms of the future populations or densities we have in those fields as well as lessening the risk of herbicide resistance evolution and spread.”

The seeds can be caught in the chaff and crushed by a seed mill or laid down in a “chaff line” to consolidate and create a mulching effect, Norsworthy said.

https://talkbusiness.net/2021/10/arkansas-researchers-to-join-efforts-to-tackle-herbicide-resistant-weed-problem/

Arkansas State Plant Board Again Loosens Dicamba Restrictions

By DANIEL BREEN

State agriculture regulators have once again shifted the rules governing a controversial herbicide that’s been blamed for widespread crop damage.

Members of the Arkansas State Plant Board on Monday voted to change the cutoff date for spraying dicamba, an herbicide used on genetically-modified cotton and soybeans.

The weedkiller, which has been responsible for thousands of complaints of damage in the state, can now be sprayed legally until the end of June, later than last year’s May 25 cutoff. That’s despite research from the University of Arkansas showing the chemical can vaporize at higher temperatures, causing damage to non-tolerant plants.

https://www.ualrpublicradio.org/post/arkansas-state-plant-board-again-loosens-dicamba-restrictions

Leaves of non-tolerant soybeans show signs of dicamba damage at a University of Arkansas research station in Keiser, Ark. in July 2019.CREDIT DANIEL BREEN / KUAR NEWS

Leaves of non-tolerant soybeans show signs of dicamba damage at a University of Arkansas research station in Keiser, Ark. in July 2019.

CREDIT DANIEL BREEN / KUAR NEWS

Dicamba Debate Could Impact Crop Planning For 2021

The debate over the use of dicamba use continues to rage throughout the country and in the courtroom and it will soon affect crop planning for 2021.

The broad-spectrum herbicide, which was first developed and registered in the late 1960s, has been the foundation of several marketed weed control measures and, more recently, genetically modified seed technologies.

https://www.ualrpublicradio.org/post/dicamba-debate-could-impact-crop-planning-2021

Dicamba Debate Could Impact Crop Planning For 2021

The debate over the use of dicamba use continues to rage throughout the country and in the courtroom and it will soon affect crop planning for 2021. The broad-spectrum herbicide, which was first developed and registered in the late 1960s, has been the foundation of several marketed weed control measures and, more recently, genetically modified seed technologies.