Do you know the difference between Glufosinate
or Glyphosate?
AgFax.Com
- Your Online Ag News Source
March 3, 2010 - University of Illlinois
Extension Weed Specialist Aaron Hager cautions farmers to know the
differences between glufosinate and glyphosate. When
glyphosate-resistant soybean came on the market a few years ago, many
believed it was unlikely that another herbicide or herbicide-resistant crop
would be needed again, Hager said. However, over time, farmers saw more and
more glyphosate-resistant weed species popping up but no new herbicide
active ingredients coming into the marketplace to control them.
"Resistance evolves in weeds through repeated
applications of the same type of herbicide," Hager said. "The once-perceived
invincibility of glyphosate has been tempered by the realities imposed by
the diversity of our Illinois cropping systems. New weed management
practices are needed to manage the consequences of long-term weed control."
One new herbicide-resistant variety, glufosinate-resistant
soybean, became commercially available in 2009. Glufosinate, another
non-selective herbicide, is sold under the trade name Ignite.
And while glyphosate and glufosinate may sound alike and
share certain similarities as they provide broad-spectrum weed control, lack
soil-residual activity, and require herbicide-resistant crops for in-crop
applications, they should not be used interchangeably.
"Significant differences exist between these two popular
herbicides that require deeper understanding of how each one works," Hager
said. "For example, in 2010 you would not want to spray glyphosate on
glufosinate-resistant soybean, or glufosinate on glyphosate-resistant
soybean."
Glufosinate inhibits a plant enzyme involved in the
early steps of nitrogen assimilation. Its target site is completely
different than glyphosate's. Because of this, glufosinate can control
glyphosate-resistant weed populations such as waterhemp and marestail.
While their spectrum of control is comparable for
several weed species, glufosinate tends to be more effective on annual
broadleaf weeds than annual grasses, while glyphosate is more effective on
grasses.
Glufosinate
is a "contact" herbicide, in contrast to glyphosate being extensively
translocated within the plant. Hager encourages farmers to utilize
application parameters that provide for the best coverage of target weeds
and consider environmental conditions that optimize glufosinate's
performance.
For example, glufosinate performs better in bright
sunshine and warm air temperatures. Due to its limited translocation,
glufosinate should be applied when annual weeds are 6 inches tall or less.
"We can control large weeds with glyphosate," Hager
said. "But we have to manage weeds with glufosinate. We need to think
differently about how we apply it. Farmers may want to include soil-residual
herbicides or spray glufosinate twice — early when the weeds are smaller
because it needs contact with the whole plant and a second time due to
waterhemp's late emergence."
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