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Sold on cut-rate herbicides
For the past 15 years, sugarbeet growers have been applying herbicides
in narrow bands over their emerging crops. That practice saved money over
broadcast spraying, but it allowed weeds to sprout and spread between
bands.
Beginning this year, Idaho sugarbeet growers can have it both ways: they
can blanket their fields with herbicides, but do it so thinly that they
wonÕt need additional herbicide. Why? Because an uptake-enhancing substance
called methylated seed oil makes applications at one-third the standard
rate as effective as the full rate.
A study by weed scientist
Don Morishita showed the value of reducing herbicide application rates
in sugarbeets.
By offering growers broader coverage, less need for backup cultivation
to control weeds, and the flexibility to apply weedkillers aerially, "micro-rate"
applications can save growers money. Amalgamated Sugar Co. representative
Del Traveller says he would "be surprised if we didnÕt have nearly 50
percent of growers try it."
Last year, extension weed scientist Don Morishita organized a pilot study
involving up to 500 sugarbeet growers. Ninety percent of growers who reported
back said they were "very satisfied with the level of weed control and
would use it again."
Two years of research studies by Morishita at Kimberly and by Oregon
State University counterpart Corey Ransom at Ontario confirmed that combinations
of micro-rate herbicides can provide excellent control of most weeds except
kochia.
In part through their efforts, herbicide manufacturer Aventis will allow
growers to legally apply combinations of seven different herbicides, augmented
with methylated seed oil, at below-label ratesÑalthough Aventis wonÕt
guarantee success.
-Marlene Fritz
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