Popular Posts
-
Web design expert Zengenuity rallies behind efforts to promote and advance open source platform CiviCRM by sponsoring this year's gathe...
-
Dharne & Co. has designed and developed a new eCommerce website for Mighty Buy Back, an online company that deals in used CDs, DVDs and...
-
Published October 15, 2011 | Associated Press Portland, ME – Each December for the past 20 years, a Maine wreath company has arranged for ...
-
Raleigh-based web design and internet marketing firm TheeDesign Studios announces their move at the end of the month. TheeDesign Studios wi...
Blog Archive
-
▼
2011
(144)
-
▼
October
(69)
- Phoenix Police Fatally Shoot Man in Wheelchair
- Maine Company's Wreath-Laying Ceremony Expands at ...
- Obama: King 'Stirred Our Conscience'
- Quadruple Amputee Gets New Arms, Hands
- Utilities Company Seeks to Evict Ground Zero Mosqu...
- National Guard Joins Search for Missing Baby
- University of Maryland Police Defend Tornado Warnings
- Pennsylvania Parents Of Boy Who Needs Shade Sue Ov...
- Adult, Baby Zebra Escape Exhibit at Boston Zoo
- FBI Investigating Dead Newborn Found on Cruise Ship
- After 3 Disasters, No Federal Help For Virgina Town
- Police Investigate New Information in Case of Miss...
- Philadelphia Police Find Four Malnourished People ...
- Three Killed, Four Injured in California Boating A...
- 92 'Occupy Wall Street' Protesters Arrested in New...
- Apple Wins, Samsung Tablet Banned in Australia
- Apple Co-Founder First in Line for New iPhone
- Full BlackBerry Service Restored, Research in Moti...
- Fans Get Wacky as Apple iPhone 4S Goes on Sale
- Russian Rocket Failure Shouldn’t Force Space Stati...
- Apple iPhone 4S Hits Store Shelves Worldwide
- The Original Human Language Like Yoda Sounded
- Apple Guru Upstart Prospers as New Business Altern...
- The Geek Squad Solves Your Technology Problems
- 'I Fed Bigfoot Blueberry Bagels,' Michigan Woman Says
- Flood Barriers Hold Firm in Shielding Bangkok
- No Joke: BlackBerry Problems Began With 'The Office'
- Stem cells reverse blindness caused by chemical burns
- Radar reveals extent of buried ancient Egyptian city
- iPhone Owners Disappointed by New iPhone 4S
- California Governor Declares Oct. 16 'Steve Jobs Day'
- Battle against lice may be aided by new genome study
- Find, Shop and Organize Your Style With These Fash...
- Nationwide project lends new details on earthquakes
- U.S.-Russian crew blasts off to space station
- NASA Buys Flights on Virgin Galactic's Private Spa...
- Roundup resistant weeds pose environmental threat
- Russian 'Stealth Destroyer' Just a Sales Gimmick?
- 6 Free Apps to Turn an Android Phone Into an Apple...
- Jimmy Buffett's Gulf rescue mission: Saving marine...
- Ask USA TODAY Weather
- Ancient legends once walked among early humans?
- Group seeks endangered listing for Franklin's bumb...
- John Glenn: Keep U.S. space shuttles flying
- Online Dating Matures: 5 New Sites That Will Get Y...
- 100,000-Year-Old Art Studio Found in South African...
- Roborocks and Transformer Trucks: Kid-Pleasing Mil...
- Roborocks and Transformer Trucks: Kid-Pleasing Mil...
- No Joke: BlackBerry Problems Began With 'The Office'
- Russian 'Stealth Destroyer' Just a Sales Gimmick?
- Find, Shop and Organize Your Style With These Fash...
- 6 Free Apps to Turn an Android Phone Into an Apple...
- California Governor Declares Oct. 16 'Steve Jobs Day'
- 100,000-Year-Old Art Studio Found in South African...
- Radar reveals extent of buried ancient Egyptian city
- Ask USA TODAY Weather
- U.S.-Russian crew blasts off to space station
- Nationwide project lends new details on earthquakes
- Jimmy Buffett's Gulf rescue mission: Saving marine...
- Ancient legends once walked among early humans?
- Stem cells reverse blindness caused by chemical burns
- Battle against lice may be aided by new genome study
- Group seeks endangered listing for Franklin's bumb...
- Roundup resistant weeds pose environmental threat
- John Glenn: Keep U.S. space shuttles flying
- Exhibit imagines utopian, green cities in 2030
- Nations fail to agree on curbing Japan whale hunt
- Not just oil: Methane gas may cause 'dead zones' i...
- Obama plan to land on asteroid may be unrealistic ...
-
▼
October
(69)
Recent Posts
Monday, October 17, 2011
Roundup resistant weeds pose environmental threat
By David Mercer, Associated Press CHAMPAIGN, Ill. — When the weed killer Roundup was introduced in the 1970s, it proved it could kill nearly any plant while still being safer than many other herbicides, and it allowed farmers to give up harsher chemicals and reduce tilling that can contribute to erosion.But 24 years later, a few sturdy species of weed resistant to Roundup have evolved, forcing farmers to return to some of the less environmentally safe practices they abandoned decades ago.The situation is the worst in the South, where some farmers now walk fields with hoes, killing weeds in a way their great-grandfathers were happy to leave behind. And the problem is spreading quickly across the Corn Belt and beyond, with Roundup now proving unreliable in killing at least 10 weed species in at least 22 states. Some species, like Palmer amaranth in Arkansas and water hemp and marestail in Illinois, grow fast and big, producing tens of thousands of seeds."It's getting to be a big deal," said Mike Plumer, a 61-year-old farmer and University of Illinois agronomist who grows soybeans and cotton near the southern Illinois community of Creal Springs. "If you've got it, it's a real big deal."When Monsanto introduced Roundup in 1976, "it was like the best thing since sliced bread," said Garry Niemeyer, who grows corn and soybeans near Auburn in central Illinois.The weed killer, known generically as glyphosate, is absorbed through plants' leaves and kills them by blocking the production of proteins they need to grow. The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency considers it to have little toxicity to people and animals, and aside from the plants it's sprayed on, it's less of a threat to the environment because it quickly binds to soil and becomes inactive.Monsanto's introduction of seeds designed to survive Roundup made things even better for farmers because they could spray it on emerging crops to wipe out the weeds growing alongside them. Seeds containing Monsanto's Roundup Ready traits are now used to grow about 90% of the nation's soybeans and 70% of its corn and cotton.With increased reliance on Roundup, herbicide use on corn decreased from 2.76 pounds an acre in 1994 to 2.06 in 2005, the most recent year for which the U.S. Department of Agriculture has data. Spread that out over the 81.8 million acres planted in 2005, and it's a decrease of more than 57 million pounds of herbicides annually.Farmers also found they could cut back, or in some cases eliminate tilling, reducing erosion and fuel use.But with any herbicide, the more it's used, the more likely it'll run into individual plants within a species that have just enough genetic variation to survive what kills most of their relatives. With each generation, the survivors represent a larger percentage of the species.St. Louis-based Monsanto maintains the resistance is often overstated, noting that most weeds show no sign of immunity."We believe that glyphosate will remain an important tool in the farmers' arsenal," Monsanto spokesman John Combest said.That said, the company has started paying cotton farmers $12 an acre to cover the cost of other herbicides to use alongside Roundup to boost its effectiveness.The trend has confirmed some food safety groups' belief that biotechnology won't reduce the use of chemicals in the long run."That's being reversed," said Bill Freese, a chemist with the Washington, D.C.-based Center For Food Safety, which promotes organic agriculture. "They're going to dramatically increase use of those chemicals, and that's bad news."The first weeds in the U.S. that survived Roundup were found about 10 years ago in Delaware.Agricultural experts said the use of other chemicals is already creeping up. Monsanto and other companies are developing new seeds designed to resist older herbicides like dicamba and 2,4-D, a weed killer developed during World War II and an ingredient in Agent Orange, which was used to destroy jungle foliage during the Vietnam War and is blamed for health problems among veterans.Penn State University weed scientist David Mortensen estimates that in three or four years, farmers' use of dicamba and 2,4-D will increase by 55.1 million pounds a year because of resistance to Roundup. That would push both far up the list of herbicides heavily used by farmers.Dicamba and 2,4-D both easily drift beyond the areas where they're sprayed, making them a threat to neighboring crops and wild plants, Mortensen said. That, in turn, could also threaten wildlife."We're finding that the (wild) plants that grow on the field edges actually support beneficial insects, like bees," he said.In Australia, weed scientist Stephen Powles has been a sort of evangelist for saving Roundup, calling it a near-miraculous farming tool.Australia has been dealing with Roundup-resistant weeds since the mid 1990s, but changes in farming practices have helped keep it effective, Powers said. That has included using a broader array of herbicides to kill off Roundup resistant weeds and employing other methods of weed control.Those alternative methods, such as planting so-called cover crops like rye to hold back weeds during the winter and other times when fields aren't planted with corn, soybeans or cotton, are the key, said Freese, the Center For Food Safety chemist.Otherwise, he said, "We're talking a pesticide treadmill here. It's just coming back to kick us in the butt now with resistant weeds."Copyright 2010 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. Guidelines: You share in the USA TODAY community, so please keep your comments smart and civil. Don't attack other readers personally, and keep your language decent. Use the "Report Abuse" button to make a difference. Read more.
Labels:environmental,resistant,Roundup,threat,weeds
Subscribe to:
Post Comments
(Atom)
0 comments: