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Consider Weed Growth Stage for Optimum Control with Liberty Application

By Debalin Sarangi
 
Six weeds have been confirmed resistant to glyphosate in Nebraska due to repeated application of glyphosate in Roundup Ready® corn-soybean production systems. The increasing prevalence of herbicide-resistant weeds is compelling growers to diversify weed management practices. LibertyLink® technology in corn and soybean provides an opportunity to apply Liberty (active ingredient: glufosinate; site-of-action group 10) as a postemergence on top of the crop canopy.
 
Liberty is a water-soluble non-selective herbicide that can control a broad spectrum of emerged broadleaf and grass weeds. It is a contact herbicide, which means it only kills the plant parts contacted by the herbicide. Small weed size and uniform spray coverage are necessary for optimum control of emerged weeds.
 
Following are spraying guidelines to be considered to ensure maximum weed control with Liberty:
 
1. Target the weeds at their early growth stage. Liberty should be applied when weeds are less than 4 inches tall. The bigger the weeds at the time of control, the smaller the chances for effective weed control. Moreover, shoot-regrowth can be seen when Liberty is sprayed on a weed more than 4 inches tall. The time-lapse video shows why weed height is important for Liberty application. It captures a UNL study on control of glyphosate-resistant common waterhemp using Liberty at 29 fluid ounces per acre applied when plants are 4, 6 and 18 inches tall. Shoot regrowth is visible on treated plants more than 4 inches tall.
 
2. Follow the instructions listed on herbicide label. The Liberty label notes that the herbicide can be applied at 32 to 43 fluid ounces per acre as a burndown (before planting), and at 29 to 43 fluid ounces per acre in LibertyLink corn and soybeans as a postemergence (with a cumulative maximum of 87 fluid ounces per acre per year). Liberty should be applied at a full rate to avoid the selection pressure on weeds. All Liberty applications must be made more than 60 days before harvesting corn forage and 70 days before harvesting corn grain and soybean.
 
It's recommended that ammonium sulfate (AMS) be mixed with Liberty at 1.5 to 3 pounds per acre, depending on the tank-mix partners, to improve weed control efficacy, especially for difficult-to-control weeds, such as velvetleaf, common lambsquarters, giant ragweed, and pigweed. A minimum of 15 gallons of carrier volume per acre is needed to ensure good spray coverage. The volume can be increased up to 20 gallons per acre in a dense weed canopy. Medium to coarse spray droplets are necessary to reduce the spray drift to sensitive crops; however, flood jet nozzles should not be used for Liberty application. Examples of recommended nozzles are TeeJet VisiFlo Flat, XR TeeJet Extended Range Flat, Turbo TwinJet Flat, or TurboDrop XL. Liberty should be applied when wind speed is less than 10 miles per hour to reduce spray drift.
 
3. Spray on a warm and sunny day. The efficacy of Liberty is maximized by warm temperatures, high humidity, and bright sunlight. Liberty should be applied from two hours after sunrise to two hours before sunset. Avoid spraying when a heavy dew or fog is present and weeds are under stress due to drought, cold, or extended cloudiness. Rainfall within four hours of Liberty application may wash out the herbicide and reduce its efficacy.
 
Glufosinate-Resistant Weeds in the US
 
Italian ryegrass has been confirmed resistant to Liberty in California and Oregon. It’s important to diversify weed management practices to delay the evolution of resistance to Liberty. Rotating crops, selecting for herbicide-resistant traits, and using herbicides with multiple “effective” sites-of-action is recommended to reduce selection pressure.
 

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Wheat Yields in USA and China Threatened by Heat Waves Breaking Enzymes

Video: Wheat Yields in USA and China Threatened by Heat Waves Breaking Enzymes

A new peer reviewed study looks at the generally unrecognized risk of heat waves surpassing the threshold for enzyme damage in wheat.

Most studies that look at crop failure in the main food growing regions (breadbaskets of the planet) look at temperatures and droughts in the historical records to assess present day risk. Since the climate system has changed, these historical based risk analysis studies underestimate the present-day risks.

What this new research study does is generate an ensemble of plausible scenarios for the present climate in terms of temperatures and precipitation, and looks at how many of these plausible scenarios exceed the enzyme-breaking temperature of 32.8 C for wheat, and exceed the high stress yield reducing temperature of 27.8 C for wheat. Also, the study considers the possibility of a compounded failure with heat waves in both regions simultaneously, this greatly reducing global wheat supply and causing severe shortages.

Results show that the likelihood (risk) of wheat crop failure with a one-in-hundred likelihood in 1981 has in today’s climate become increased by 16x in the USA winter wheat crop (to one-in-six) and by 6x in northeast China (to one-in-sixteen).

The risks determined in this new paper are much greater than that obtained in previous work that determines risk by analyzing historical climate patterns.

Clearly, since the climate system is rapidly changing, we cannot assume stationarity and calculate risk probabilities like we did traditionally before.

We are essentially on a new planet, with a new climate regime, and have to understand that everything is different now.