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Keeping
glyphosate resistance rare in Australian cropping
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A guide to keeping glyphosate resistant ryegrass rare in
Australian cropping.
Tip the scales in your favour to minimise the risk of glyphosate
resistance in annual ryegrass
Risk increasing factors
Continuous reliance on glyphosate pre-seeding
Lack of tillage
Lack of effective in-crop weed control
Frequent glyphosate-based chemical fallow
Inter-row glyphosate use (unregistered)
Frequent croptopping with glyphosate
High weed numbers
Risk decreasing factors
The double knock technique*
Strategic use of alternative knockdown groups
Full-cut cultivation at sowing
Effective in-crop weed control
Use alternative herbicide groups or tillage for inter-row
and fallow weed control
Non-herbicide practices for weed seed kill
Croptopping with alternative herbicide groups
Farm hygiene to prevent resistant seed movement
*The double knock technique is defined as using a full cut
cultivation OR the full label rate of a paraquat-based product
(Herbicide Group L) following the glyphosate (Herbicide Group
M) knockdown application.
What to do
if you suspect glyphosate resistance
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All Group M herbicides are glyphosate herbicides.
This guide is based on original concept for minimising glyphosate
resistance in annual ryegrass in southern Australian grain
growing by Paul Neve, WAHRI, University of WA. Optimal management
techniques for other weed species may differ.
This guide has been produced by the National Glyphosate Sustainability
Working Group, a collaborative initiative aimed at promoting
the sustainable use of glyphosate in Australian agriculture,
involving the CRC for Australian Weed Management, Monsanto,
Syngenta, Nufarm, WA Herbicide Resistance Initiative (University
of WA), University of Adelaide, Charles Sturt University,
Queensland DPI&F, Department of Agriculture & Food WA, NSW DPI,
CRT/Town & Country and the GRDC. 2005.
The GSWG gratefully acknowledges the financial support of
the CRC for Australian Weed Management, CropLife Australia and GRDC. |
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