WEED CONTROL STRATEGIES FOR EACH HT SYSTEM

by | Jun 5, 2019 | Canola, Weeds

Here are strategies to improve weed control results for each herbicide-tolerant (HT) system.

Falco

This is the Group-2 sulfonyl-urea-resistance system from Cibus. The partner herbicide, called Draft, controls a wide variety of broadleaf weeds. Application can occur from the 2- to 5-leaf stage and a grassy-weed herbicide may be used from the 3- to 5-leaf stage.

Clearfield

Group 2 products for the Clearfield system perform well with coarse sprays. Treat crops during warm weather when weeds are actively growing and soil moisture is adequate for rapid growth. Under cool or dry conditions, control of some weeds may be severely reduced and the risk of crop injury increases. Do not spray Group 2s if temperatures of 5°C or lower are forecast within 3 days of application.

Crop staging: The application window is 2- to 7-leaf stage of the crop for Ares, and 2- to 6-leaf stage for other IMI products. Growers have various product choices, with several different tank mix partners. Ares, Odyssey Ultra or Tensile can be applied only once per season (no split applications) and cannot be followed by a related product. A grower cannot apply Ares and then come back with Odyssey Ultra, for example. However, Ares with imazapyr has some flushing weed control from residual soil activity.

If thistles are a target: Ares may be mixed with Lontrel 360 at 84 mL/acre. Odyssey may be mixed with 360 g/L clopyralid formulations at 170 to 227 mL/acre, Pyralid at 204 to 272 mL/acre, or Lontrel XC at 102 to 137 mL/acre. Tensile is a co-pack of Solo and the dry Lontrel formulation at an equivalent of 85 mL/acre of a 360 g/L clopyralid formulation.

Liberty Link

As a contact herbicide, Liberty is recommended to be applied as medium to slightly coarse droplets (approximately 200 – 350 microns) and needs water volumes of at least 10 gallons per acre to maintain efficacy at that spray quality. Liberty works best in bright sunshine when temperatures are hot and weeds are actively growing.

Most control issues for Liberty and other herbicides that rely heavily on contact activity are related to poor coverage from insufficient water carrier volumes, combined with a coarse or very course spray pattern and/or late stage at application.

Crop staging: The application window for Liberty is from emergence to early bolting. Set the rate based on weed species and pressure. Label changes for Liberty 150SN now allow for up to three applications. Allowed rates are 1.35 L/ac. or 1.62 L/ac. for each application.

Liberty may be tank mixed with clethodim for additional control of grassy weeds or Facet for enhance cleaver control.The mixing order is unique when tank mixing clethodim with Liberty. Add the surfactant first, then Liberty, then clethodim. This is one of the only times when surfactant goes in the tank first. This tank mix goes into solution easily and excessive agitation is not recommended or required. Click herefor more on pesticide mixing rules.

Thistles. Clopyralid-based herbicides (Lontrel brands, Pyralid, MPower Clobber) cannot be tank mixed with glufosinate-based herbicides (Liberty 150SN, MPower Vigor). If using Clopyralid for thistle control in Liberty Link canola, it should have its own separate application according to label rates and staging, either before the glufosinate application or after the thistles recover following the glufosinate application. For acceptable control, Canada thistle should have ample leaf area in a living condition for contact and uptake. For this reason, if thistles are the major problem weed, clopyralid should perhaps go before the glufosinate.

Roundup Ready

Glyphosate is suited to low drift (coarse droplet) sprays, but at low water volumes coarse sprays may not provide enough droplets per square inch. A combination of coarse spray and 5 gal./ac. (20 L/ac.) water volume is best to make sure you get droplets on even the smallest weeds. Larger droplets from higher water volumes also reduce the drift risk.

Key steps to get the most out of glyphosate:

—Sunny and warm are optimum conditions for top performance. This includes warm temperatures through the night.
—Weeds should be actively growing. Plant growth stops below 5°C. Delay applications for at least 24 hours, preferably 48 hours, after temperatures near 0°C to allow plants to recover and begin growing again.
—Use water volumes of 5-10 gal./ac. when water quality is good. Water volumes at the lower end of the range are recommended with hard water. Add ammonium sulphate to the water at 2.4 L/acre of the 490 g/L forms (or appropriate conversion to get 1.2 kg/acre of active). Find another water source for spraying glyphosate if hardness exceeds 40 grains/US gallon total hardness (700 ppm CaCO3 equivalent). See the Saskatchewan Agriculture factsheet on spray water quality.
—Smaller weeds are easier to control. Growers want to make every effort to control species such as buckwheat and winter annual weeds at the 1-3 leaf stage.
—Avoid travel speeds during spraying that will create large amounts of dust. Clark Brenzil, provincial specialist in weed management with Saskatchewan Ministry of Agriculture, says that if dusty conditions cannot be avoided, spray perpendicular to the wind beginning from the downwind end of the field to the upwind end to minimize the dust deposition on unsprayed leaves. Front-mounted booms will also help this to some degree.

Staging and rates – standard trait. The window for glyphosate on standard Roundup Ready canola is from emergence to the 6-leaf stage of the canola crop. Applying after the 6-leaf stage or above label rates is known to cause yield loss. Maximum use rates are 270 grams of acid equivalant (ae) per acre on one application or two applications of 180 g ae/ac. each. When going after thistles, buckwheat, and large dandelions, a tank mix of glyphosate and Lontrel 360 (co-packaged as Eclipse) at the 112 ml/acre rate can be applied after the 2-leaf stage.St

Staging and rates – TruFlex. TruFlex expands the in-crop spray window to first flower. That is 10 to 14 days past the 6-leaf stage cut off for the standard Roundup Ready system. TruFlex also allows for higher rates. Approved in-crop rates for Roundup WeatherMAX are 1.33 L/ac for a single application or 0.67 L/ac for two applications, up from 0.5 L/ac for a single or 0.33 L/ac for two applications in standard Roundup Ready canola. Bayer says that being able to apply Roundup WeatherMAX herbicide in-crop at these rates allows for the control of 24 additional weed species compared to the standard Roundup Ready canola system. This weeds list includes yellow foxtail, biennial wormwood and common milkweed.

For the final word on herbicide rates and timing, check the product label and consult the guide to crop protection for your province: Alberta Saskatchewan Manitoba

Source: Canola Watch

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