A2B-L«ncaster Farming, Saturday, July 9, 1994 By Using Quality Adjuvants, Herbicide Rates, Costs Can Be Reduced ANDY ANDREWS Lancaster Fanning Staff HOLTWOOD (Lancaster Co.) Pesticide applicators may be able to save as much as $B-$9 per acre on herbicide costs by using quality forms of adjuvants, accord ing to information provided during a field day held at the Steve Groff Farm last week. About IS farmers and agri industry representatives viewed the test plots on Groffs 175-acre vegetable and cash grain crop farm. Sponsored by Groff, the Pen nsylvania Association for Sustain able Agriculture (PASA), and Agri-Basics Soil Service, the field day showed how using adjuvants can contribute to weed reduction and improved stand on no-till com. In a summary provided at the field day, Groff stated, “I know that chemical companies spend millions of dollars to come up with acceptable rates for their products. I feel that with a little common sense and a few other tools such as adjuvants and proper timing, you can cut herbicide rates and reduce costs.” Adjuvants are applied with the herbicide at spray time to do a number of things. They vary by type and include: • Compatability agents. These adjuvants help certain herbicides combine to promote improved effectiveness. • Buffering agents. These lower or raise the pH of the water in the spray tank to make the herbicide more effective. • “Applicator” or “sticker” adjuvants. These allow the pesti cide to adhere more precisely to the leaf surface in post-emergent applications. • Surfactants. These decrease the ‘ ‘surface tension’ ’ of the water. This tension makes the water * ‘bead up’ ’ on the leaf surface. The adjuvant spreads the water out over leaf surface and also helps distribute the herbicide over a wider area and with more penetra tion in the soil. Groff used APSA-80, an adjuv ant available from Amway. With no-till com, Groff indicated he had “good success” with the early preplant program, spraying 2-3 weeks before planting. On a fact sheet, records indicate that he sprayed 1.25 quarts per acre of Bicep with the adjuvant the first week of April, then planted the last week in April. He then followed up with 1 quart of Prowl as com emerged to kill lambsquarter. By spot-checking the fields at the beginning of the season. Groff said it looked like using the adjuv ants helped. “That was the intent of this pro ject,” he said. “What we’re doing is making the herbicides more active in the soil.” Through calculations supplied by Groff and PASA, on plots 1-6, rates of Bicep were cut in half, from 2 quarts to 1 quart, reducing costs from $14.55 to $7.25 per acre. The rates of Prowl were cut from a quart to a pint, from $5.96 to $2.98 per acre. The adjuvant was supplied at a rate of 5 ounces per acre at a cost of $ 1.15 per acre. On plots 7-10, Bicep rate was cut from two quarts to about 1.25 quarts per acre. Adjuvant was applied at the same rate. Using the dual herbicides, sav ings came to $9.13 per acre. Groff cautioned that there was more to the equation than simply the adjuvants. Another factor included the timing of the herbi cide (he said he applies the chemi- cals right before a rain). “It has a lot to do with management,” he said. Also, choosing a quality adjuv ant is essential. Some adjuvants include alcohol as a stablizer. But a quality adjuvant will have the adjuvant material at about 80 per cent or more of the active ingredient. Farmers can profit from trials such as these. Savings can be substantial. “An $8 savings per acre, I think, is worthwhile talking about,” said Edgar Rits, a consultant from Hon ey Grove at the field day. ‘ ‘That’s less herbicide you need to put down. That’s the big issue.” Harvest data on the com yields as a result of using the adjuvants will be provided in the fall. Groff said that about 75 percent of his com is in no-till and the rest in slit till. A rotation of his com every two years at maximum also helps to cut down the incidence of weeds and insects. “I generally don’t have a prob lem with insects in com because of rotation,” he said. Other studies included the use of calcium with the spray, which had little effect on weeds and showed a ANDY ANDREWS Lancaster Fanning Staff LANDISVILLE (Lancaster Co.) There may be no “magic bullet” to take care of all a far mer’s long-term weed problems in soybeans, especially in reduced til lage situations. But that doesn’t stop many man ufacturers of herbicides and seed varieties from at least trying. One attempt is being made by a manufacturer, Monsanto, to deve lop a variety of soybean that is resistant to its own herbicide. Roundup. Research is under way at Penn State to study how effec tive the new biogenetic gene is to not only the Monsanto herbicide, but to a variety of other herbicides from other manufacturers. More than 100 agri-industry representatives were on hand to see some results of this and other soybean and com herbicide trials conducted at the Penn State Land isville Research Center during the annual Weed Tour on Thursday morning. Dwight Lingenfelter, Penn State graduate student and extension assistant, spoke about the effec tiveness of Roundup for perennial weed control in transgenic soy beans. He said the trials are look ing at long-term control of the warm season perennial weeds, such as hemp dogbane. Johnson grass, bindweed, and others. Conventional tillage has helped control weeds. But with conserva tion compliance, reduced tillage is necessary, which has presented unique problems for growers in controlling weeds. For reduced tillage, postemer gent herbicide treatments are necessary, especially the grasses. But for most applications, the solu tion only lasts one season, not long-term. '‘Effective control programs do not exist,” saidLingenfelter. “We need long-term management for rotational crops.” While there is no magic bullet to solve long-term weed problems, a concerted effort involving the right slight adjustment of the pH. What Groff found is that water pH will directly affect the performance of the herbicides. ‘ ‘lt would be good if you would check the pH of your water,” he said. He spoke about a chart that lists the most effective pHs for sev eral different types of herbicides. “There is a difference,” said Groff, indicating that some require a neutral pH and others require more acidic levels. For atrazine-based herbicides, the half-life at a water pH of 8 is only a half hour. But a a pH of 5 or 6, die half-life extends to 8 or 9 hours. It’s not uncommon to get a 7 or 8 pH in water supplies. Other fields include com incor porated into oat stubble in reduc ing herbicide use. The oat material stopped the weeds, according to Groff. Dramatic results were achieved after a hay field was plowed in the fall and only harrowed to two inches deep in the spring. The fall plowing got rid of die weeds that germinated, cutting off seed pro duction. A light disc harrowing in the spring only removed the seeds that sprouted on the top. No ‘Magic Bullet’ In Controlling Weeds In Herbicides soybean variety, good herbicide treatment, timing, and rotation can go a long way, according to the graduate student. Other herbicides compared in the long-term Penn State study, at Landsville and at Rockspring, will look at a variety of other herbicides with the new variety. According to Bill Curran, assistant professor, weed science, the new Monsanto variety won’t be available for com mercial use until at least 1996. “We need this research in order to better utilize effective control measures and, for the importance of conservation compliance, it’s necessary to integrate weed con trol approaches in order to manage these problem weeds we have,” said Lingenfelter. These methods include “biological, chemical, mechanical,” and other means. Canada thistle is a predominant weed in soybeans, according to Curran. Curran provided detail about reduced herbicide treat ments at various timing and incor poration rates, including using diphenyl ethers for broadleaf weed control, for treating thistle and other broadleaves. Com herbicide treatment infor mation was not observable at the field day because of severe weath er the night before. Wind damage cut com standability by up to 10 percent in one field at the research center, sheering off stalks. In one plot, a power line went down. John Yocum, manager of the research farm, spoke about studies that proved that weed germination in full-season beans peaks about the first week of June. But one rinding was that there was con siderably less weeds in no-till ground than in conventionally tilled soil. But stands depend on a lot of factors, including the weath er and other conditions. Also, research continues to indi cate that without a canopy, and with sunlight hitting the soil sur face, according to Yocum, produc ers are losing yield on soybeans. Also at the field day, Ed Werner, Penn State research technician and “An $8 savings per acre, I think, is worthwhile talking about,” said Edgar Rlts, a consultant from Honey Grove, left. He reviews application Information with Steve Groff. There are no weeds where the tomatoes are growing. ‘ T credit it to the fact that it was plowed in the fall,” he said. “We took care of it by harrowing twice.” Groff said that it ‘ ‘really pays to plow in the fall for late-planted Dwight Lingenfelter, Penn State graduate student and extension assistant, spoke about the effectiveness of Roundup for perennial weed control in transgenic soy beans. He said the trials are looking at long-term control of the warm season perennial weeds, such as hemp dogbane, Johnsongrass, bindweed, and others. graduate student, spoke about his work with a weed economic threshold study in com. Rob Paiks, graduate research assistant, agro AOSI i. PAY OFF! k tomatoes. We’ve just had no weed problems. “You have to try this yourself on your own farm," said Groff. “I think that’s what this demonstra tion shows there are some things you can try on your own farm and tell people about’’ nomy, spoke about his work on (rials involving triazine-resistant lambsquarters, the most common annual broadleaf in the state.