Glufosinate formulations have emerged among the most promising candidates in the urgent search for alternative herbicide solutions.
UPL’s Brian Ahrens and Tom Mudd discuss the rapid expansion of the glufosinate molecule and what it means for ag.
With what looks like unstoppable growth for glufosinate, the industry is rapidly adding capacity and investing in R&D, while seeking to avoid the pitfalls of overuse.
Glu-L will deliver an improved, highly concentrated weed control product reducing the needed amount of the product by up to 50%.
Approval by EPA enables growers more flexibility in crop protection decisions for 2020.
The USDA’s Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS) is making available for public comment a petition from […]
Willowood USA recently announced that Federal EPA has approved its technical registration for glufosinate.
This cultivar was produced through genetic engineering to tolerate the herbicides dicamba, glufosinate, quizalofop, 2,4-D, and tissue-specific glyphosate.
This new class of soybeans offers farmers a significant yield advantage and better disease resistance.
2024 hybrid class delivers strong yield advantage, advanced insect protection and herbicide-tolerant trait technology.
By knowing your target and preparing agronomic and business contingency plans, you can help hedge your bets against uncertainty in the marketplace.
Crop protection companies are battling tough-to-control weeds with current and upcoming herbicides.
Attain soybean seed has been designed to provides tolerance to glufosinate, 2,4-D choline, and glyphosate herbicides.
A suite of new herbicides help farmers manage the spread of weeds despite a host of obstacles each growing season.
If weather stalls planting and deadlines loom, AgriGold agronomists say farmers still have options.
Advances include several new modes of action active ingredients, innovative formulations, and biotechnology traits for weed, pest, and disease control.
The 2023 class includes 44 new exclusive corn products and 36 new soybean varieties.
NK Seeds provides farmers with herbicide-trait choice stacked on Syngenta Seeds’ proprietary genetics.
Ag retailers will continue adjusting to tough logistics and a challenging labor environment for the upcoming crop protection season.
The best laid plans often go awry. Such was the case in 2022 with herbicide applications in the Corn Belt, as the cold and rain kept pushing planting further out.