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Residual Herbicides Should Be Part of Roundup Ready® Corn 2 System
Agronomy | April 23, 2007

Using a residual herbicide with the Roundup Ready® Corn 2 System offers the best approach for achieving effective weed control and maximizing yield potential, according to a Michigan State University study.

The study, by Michigan State University weed specialist Dr. Jim Kells, supports Monsanto’s recommendations for good stewardship of the Roundup Ready Corn 2 System. Monsanto encourages growers to “start clean and stay clean” by using tillage or a burn-down herbicide application, followed by a residual herbicide for early weed control and an over-the-top post application of a labeled Roundup® agricultural herbicide for season-long weed control.

“The use of residual herbicides is an effective way to reduce potential yield loss if you can’t be timely with your postemergence herbicide applications,” said Dr. Jim Kells. “Putting a preplant or preemergence residual down can also help address potential weed-resistance issues.”

Farmers planting Roundup Ready Corn 2 can use the Roundup Ready Rate of a residual herbicide. In the Michigan State study, a tank mix of acetochlor and atrazine was used for the residual treatment.

“When you’re controlling weeds in field crops such as corn, your objective isn’t to kill weeds,” Kells explained. “Your objective is to preserve crop yield for that particular growing season, as well as to preserve crop yield for the following season by preventing the current season’s weeds from going to seed.”

The study also showed that, in addition to the benefits of using a residual herbicide in Roundup Ready Corn 2, the timing of postemergence over-the-top applications of glyphosate is critical.

Timing is Key

“Any delay in glyphosate applications after weeds reach four inches in height means that you run a significant risk of yield loss,” Kells said. “For effective weed control, you should make the first glyphosate application when weeds are two- to four-inches tall, then follow if necessary with a second application 12 to 14 days later. The second over-the-top herbicide treatment can be glyphosate or another herbicide.”

Kells’ study confirms that a single application of glyphosate alone will not provide season-long weed control. “In our study, all single glyphosate applications, regardless of when they were timed, resulted in a yield loss of at least nine percent.”

“Having a preemergence residual herbicide applied in Roundup Ready Corn 2, even though it means two trips across the field, will minimize yield loss to early-season weeds, and it takes some of the pressure off of being timely with your postemergence over-the-top herbicide applications,” Kells said.

Expected to be planted on approximately 50 million acres this season, Roundup Ready Corn 2 ranks as the leading corn weed control program in U.S. agriculture, offering farmers unsurpassed weed control, excellent crop safety and flexibility to manage around the weather.

Always read and follow pesticide label directions. Roundup Ready® crops contain genes that confer tolerance to glyphosate, the active ingredient in Roundup® agricultural herbicides. Roundup agricultural herbicides will kill crops that are not glyphosate tolerant. Acetochlor and atrazine are restricted-use pesticides and not registered in all states. The distribution, sale or use of an unregistered pesticide is a violation of federal and/or state law and is strictly prohibited. Roundup® and Roundup Ready® are registered trademarks of Monsanto Technology LLC. ©2007 Monsanto Company.

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