DuPont Canada his picked up registration for its Group 2 broadleaf weed killer Express SG for pre-seed burnoffs before seeding pulse crops.
The chemical company announced Friday that Express has been approved for application 24 hours before seeding field peas, dry beans, fababeans, lupins and soybeans.
The approval gives farmers “a better alternative than glyphosate alone to clean up tough weeds in their fields before seeding,” said cereals and oilseeds product manager Travis Schoonbaert in the company’s news release.
DuPont markets Express SG, a tribenuron methyl herbicide, as a boost for glyphosate in controlling weeds such as dandelion, narrow-leaved hawk’s-beard, flixweed and both conventional and Roundup Ready volunteer canola.
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Feed grains weekly: Prices bump up
To Darcy Haley, vice-president of Ag Value Brokers in Lethbridge, there are two main reasons for recent increases for feed barley and wheat. Haley said on March 12 that there’s an ongoing lack of farmer selling, plus stiff competition from the grain companies looking to export barley.
The product’s label previously covered its use on the Prairies for pre-seeding burnoff, also 24 hours before seeding spring wheat, durum or barley, and for use on summerfallow. Canola, flax, lentils or alfalfa can be seeded on treated fields two months after application.
The company cautioned in its release that Express SG “is not a fit for
every field” and that farmers should avoid its use in “coarse-textured”
soils of less than three per cent organic matter, or where fields have varying soils,
gravelly or sandy areas or eroded knolls.
