Farms.com Home   News

Syngenta Receives Federal EPA Registration For Talinor™ Herbicide For Wheat And Barley

Talinor™ herbicide from Syngenta has received federal registration from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, giving wheat and barley growers a new option for managing weed resistance and controlling damaging broadleaf weeds in 2017, pending individual state registrations.
 
“Yield-robbing weeds infest wheat and barley fields, compete with crops and can ultimately impact yield potential and crop quality,” said Don Porter, herbicide technical product lead, Syngenta. “Talinor helps protect yield and profit potential, while offering growers a new tool to help manage weed resistance.”
 
Talinor contains the company’s newest active ingredient in cereal herbicides, bicyclopyrone, combined with bromoxynil. With its two active ingredients and two modes of action, this new herbicide delivers excellent standalone control of resistant and other difficult-to-control broadleaf weeds, like kochia and Russian thistle.
 
“Once resistance has been confirmed, it can remain in the weed population for decades,” said Nathan Popiel, a Syngenta agronomic service representative in North Dakota. “If growers wait until herbicide resistance is confirmed in their field, the ability to manage their weeds may become more difficult. Talinor is an important tool for controlling troublesome weeds, particularly those that have become resistant to ALS-inhibitor, synthetic auxin and glyphosate herbicides.”
 
In addition to flexible crop rotation and a wide application window, Talinor provides excellent tank-mix flexibility, and is an ideal mix partner with Axial® brand herbicides for one-pass grass and broadleaf control. Talinor also is conveniently packaged with CoAct+™ additive to deliver optimum performance.
Click here to see more...

Trending Video

Weather Forecast - Eric Hunt

Video: Weather Forecast - Eric Hunt

With snow in western Nebraska and an early spring in the eastern portion of the state this week, what can we expect to see in the week ahead? Market Journal Chief Meteorologist Eric Hunt has the answers.