Experts Stress Importance of
Volunteer Corn Control
Clean Soybean Fields
Could Protect Future of Bt Corn Hybrids
Yuma, Arizona. (07/01/09): For many
soybean growers, little is more aggravating than watching volunteer corn plants
pop up above the soybean canopy.
However, recent research indicates that volunteer Bt corn can be much
more than an eyesore; it may pose a serious threat to the long-term viability
of insect-resistant corn hybrids.
According
to a 2009 Purdue University research report titled “Volunteer Corn Presents New
Challenges for Insect Resistance Management” (Krupke, Johnson, et al), the
prevalence of volunteer corn in Indiana soybean fields increased from a mean of
3% of all fields sampled in 2003 to 12 percent of fields sampled in 2005. The study found this four-fold increase
strongly correlated to the increased adoption of glyphosate-resistant corn
hybrids during that period.
Purdue
University entomologist
Dr. Christian Krupke notes that this trend continued during the 2006 and 2007
growing seasons. “What we found was that
in areas where triple-stacked corn hybrids were planted in 2006 followed by
soybeans in 2007, we had a great deal of volunteer corn in some of those
fields,” Krupke says. “Most of the
volunteer corn showed up as being both Roundup Ready and having the Bt gene for
rootworm.”
Volunteer
Corn Allows for Rootworm Survival
Since
soybean roots alone do not support corn rootworm larvae, a typical corn-soybean
rotation program has typically helped to keep rootworm populations in
check. However, the presence of
volunteer corn plants in soybean fields allow some larvae produced from
overwintering eggs to survive.
Entomologists
like Dr. Krupke worry that a relatively high percentage of volunteer Bt corn
plants do not express enough of the Bt toxins to effectively control
root-feeding larvae. As a result, surviving larvae could accelerate the
evolution of Bt-resistant rootworm populations.
Early-season
Weed Control Is Imperative
While
volunteer corn’s potential to rob soybeans of water, nutrients, sunlight and
yield potential has been documented for years, the threat of insect resistance
heightens the need for effective, early-season volunteer corn control.
Growers
rotating from Roundup Ready corn to Roundup Ready soybeans need to find another
herbicide besides glyphosate to control glyphosate-resistant volunteer
corn. “The goal of producers should be
to control as much volunteer corn as possible as early in the season as
possible to protect soybean yield,” states Dr. Michael Owen, professor of
agronomy at Iowa State University. “The best management practice involves
tank-mixing a graminicide with glyphosate in the first post-emergence treatment
to the field.”
Nick
Vandervort, Midwest field development manager
for Gowan Company, echoes Dr. Owen’s thoughts.
“Growers must control this volunteer Bt corn early in the season. If growers wait to control them until the
second glyphosate pass is made, they’ve given the insects much more exposure
time to sub-lethal doses of the Bt proteins.”
Quizalofop-p-ethyl, the active
ingredient in Targa post-emergence herbicide from Gowan Company, has been
proven effective against volunteer corn for more than three decades. “Quizalofop-p-ethyl has been proven in our
research to be a very effective molecule offering effective and consistent
control of volunteer corn in soybeans,” Dr. Owen adds.
Along
with controlling both glyphosate-tolerant and conventional volunteer corn in
soybeans, Targa also controls perennial grasses such as Johnsongrass,
quackgrass and bermudagrass.
Additionally, it can be tank-mixed easily with glyphosate for one-pass
control of most grasses and broadleaf weeds.
The
future might hold a change in how soybean growers perceive the threat posed by
volunteer corn. “The findings of Dr.
Christian Krupke and Dr. Bill Johnson at Purdue move volunteer corn out of a
predominantly weed competition and aesthetics realm and significantly increase
its importance,” Vandervort says. “Our
industry may be heading toward a ‘zero-tolerance” mindset regarding volunteer
corn due to these new findings regarding insect resistance.”
Gowan
Company is a family-owned provider of crop protection products for specialty
and broad-acre markets of agriculture.
Established in 1963, Gowan Company is dedicated to supporting
agriculture through regulatory defense, market experience and product
development.