Issue Date: May 21, 2012
War On Weeds
News Channels: Biological SCENE, Environmental SCENE
Keywords: crop protection, herbicides, gmo, pesticides, glyphosate, weed resistance
Farmers, plant geneticists, chemists, and agronomists recently have been engaged in an arms race against weeds, particularly weeds that have evolved resistance to the common herbicide glyphosate. A second generation of herbicide-tolerant crops has been developed to battle resistant weeds, but they have sparked concerns about overreliance on chemical controls.
Introduced in the 1980s, glyphosate has been the best-selling herbicide since 2001. Monsanto, which markets glyphosate as Roundup, introduced crops engineered to be tolerant of glyphosate in the late 1990s, and farmers now plant Roundup Ready herbicide-tolerant corn, soybeans, and cotton on the majority of cultivated acres in the U.S. Thanks to the popularity of the firm’s Roundup Ready trait, last year 94% of soybean acres were herbicide-tolerant, as was 73% of cotton acreage and 72% of corn acreage, according to the Department of Agriculture.
Farmers liked glyphosate because it vastly simplified weed control. But it also led to the emergence of resistant weeds that are increasingly hard to kill.
Beginning in 2013, pending approval by USDA, farmers will be able to plant crops that have been genetically modified to also tolerate applications of the herbicides 2,4-dichlorophenoxyacetic acid (2,4-D) and 3,6-dichloro-2-methoxybenzoic acid (dicamba).
Dow AgroSciences’ 2,4-D-tolerant corn, part of its Enlist Weed Control System, is the first of the new crops in line for USDA consideration and marketing to U.S. farmers. Monsanto plans to follow with its 2014 introduction of dicamba-tolerant soybeans, called Roundup Ready 2 Xtend. Both companies say that the emergence of weeds resistant to glyphosate will drive farmers’ adoption of the new seeds.
Farmers would still be able to manage most weeds through applications of glyphosate, but for any resistant weeds that remain, they will have the option of adding 2,4-D or dicamba without worrying about damaging their crops. The firms are promoting the seeds as a way to control weeds without having to resort to tilling or hand-weeding. So-called low-till or conservation tillage is a common soil conservation practice.
But in the long term, experts say, if farmers do not also use nonchemical methods for weed control, such as crop rotation, eventually weeds will emerge that are resistant to 2,4-D and dicamba as well as glyphosate.
The new crops will be a valuable tool to help diversify weed management programs, says David R. Shaw, a research professor at Mississippi State University and chair of a task force on weed resistance for the Iowa-based nonprofit Council for Agricultural Science & Technology. However, if farmers depend too much on the new technology, “evolutionary nature is such that when you put enough selection pressure on a species, it will develop resistance,” he says. That pressure would create weeds that could survive 2,4-D or dicamba applications.
The specter of weeds brandishing multiple resistances has made the new crops a target for groups promoting sustainable agriculture. Others have raised alarms about risks associated with an increase in use of 2, 4-D and dicamba. For example, growers of crops that are susceptible to the herbicides are worried that more drift of 2,4-D and dicamba from treated fields will weaken or kill their crops.
For their part, Dow and Monsanto insist that the lessons learned from overreliance on glyphosate are changing farming practices. Never again, they say, will it be the norm to use the same herbicide, year after year, on the same crop in the same location. They dispute estimates that the use of 2,4-D or dicamba will greatly increase. And both firms have developed new, low-drift formulations of these herbicides that they say will minimize off-field migration.
At Dow, plant scientists began the search for a new herbicide-tolerance trait almost 10 years ago, with the emergence of weeds resistant to glyphosate, says Mark Peterson, Dow’s global biology team leader for Enlist. The company settled on 2,4-D as the target herbicide because it is already commonly used, kills a wide range of weeds, and has a mode of action that’s different from glyphosate’s. Both 2,4-D and dicamba are synthetic versions of the plant hormone auxin. Putting additional auxin on weeds triggers uncontrolled growth that leads to death.
To find genes that confer a tolerance to 2,4-D, scientists looked in bacteria that live in soils where 2,4-D has been used. One bacterium, Ralstonia eutropha, produces enzymes that break down the molecule into constituents that are not lethal to plants.
Dow’s plant geneticists were able to insert the gene into corn, soy, and cotton. The resulting genotypes were tested for 2,4-D tolerance, and the successful plants were then tested for any impact on yield, grain quality, stress tolerance, or maturity. “Our plant breeders say they are very well behaved plant traits,” Peterson reports. Well-behaved traits confer the desired advantage without also bringing along other metabolic changes that would weaken the crops.
While the Enlist crops were showing their stuff in field trials, Dow chemists worked on a new formulation of 2,4-D, called 2,4-D choline, to minimize volatility. David E. Hillger, an application technology specialist at Dow AgroSciences, explains that rather than traditional ester or amine forms of the molecule, which can volatilize in the environment, the new version is a more stable quaternary ammonium salt.
In addition, Hillger says Dow’s proprietary manufacturing process produces a product with less particle drift when application directions are followed. Dow recently reported that field tests of the formula showed a 92% reduction in volatility and a 90% reduction in drift.
Crops that contain the 2,4-D tolerance- trait will also tolerate older versions of 2,4-D. However, Dow has developed a stewardship program that obligates farmers to use a premixed combination of 2,4-D choline and glyphosate. The program includes farmer education about using multiple herbicide modes of action, the requirement to use Dow’s new herbicide mixture, and labeling instructions for proper application. State pesticide regulations generally require farmers to follow labeling guidelines when using herbicides.
Soybean growers will have their first opportunity to use a synthetic auxin herbicide beginning in 2014 with the arrival of Monsanto’s dicamba-tolerant soybeans. Like Dow’s 2,4-D trait, the dicamba-tolerance gene was isolated from a soil bacterium, Stenotrophomonas maltophilia. Much of the plant genetics work was done by researchers at the University of Nebraska, Lincoln. The bacteria metabolize dicamba with the help of the enzyme dicamba monooxygenase, explains Cindy L. Arnevik, Monsanto’s North American soybean trait lead.
Monsanto licensed the trait technology in 2005 from the university, and Arnevik’s team tested more than 100 resulting transformations. “We can put the same gene in a plant and one will express in the right place and get the right tolerance; the next plant doesn’t,” Arnevik says. Years of field trials of the tolerant strains followed to make sure the trait does not affect yield, regardless of whether the field is sprayed with herbicide.
On the chemicals side, Monsanto worked with BASF to develop a new generation of dicamba that has reduced volatility compared with the common formulation available today. Current versions of dicamba are not labeled for use with soybeans, giving farmers added incentive to trade up to the new formula. Monsanto does not plan to require farmers to spray a dual-herbicide mixture; farmers in areas where resistant weeds are not a problem can stick with glyphosate.
On the other hand, farmers who do have glyphosate-resistant weeds should not depend just on a two-herbicide blend, even in cases where the mixture appears to kill all weeds. Monsanto and Dow promote varying the herbicides used and always including ones that have a residual effect when applied to the soil.
More herbicide-resistant traits are in the pipeline, which will increase the availability of diverse modes of action. For example, Syngenta and Bayer CropScience are collaborating on a p-hydroxyphenylpyruvate dioxygenase herbicide-tolerance trait for soybeans. And crops tolerant of three or more herbicides are not far behind.
Since the advent of Roundup Ready traits, however, farmers have not been in the habit of controlling for nonexistent weeds. “To some extent it is true that farmers might not change what they are doing until a resistant weed appears. Roundup Ready was so good, farmers could forget what they knew in terms of weed management. Before that, there were no silver bullets,” says MSU’s Shaw. “There is now a whole generation of farmers that haven’t known anything but this very simplistic system.”
In addition to using a changing rotation of herbicides, Shaw says farmers will need to change their agricultural practices to include crop rotation, cover cropping, and weed control after harvest. And in some areas, low-till practices will be more difficult to adhere to.
Bill Freese, science policy analyst at the Center for Food Safety, is not convinced that seed firms will encourage better habits. “All of this talk about stewardship and grower education is window dressing. Monsanto promoted Roundup Ready as a weed system, and that is how Dow is promoting its crops,” he says. What’s more, he is skeptical that new application guidelines to control herbicide drift will be followed. “A lot of pesticide application is done by commercial applicators.” With applications scheduled in advance, “there is a low likelihood they will hold off on applying if wind speed is too high.”
Freese also points to research from Pennsylvania State University that projects a fourfold increase in the amount of 2,4-D used on corn after growers adopt the Enlist system. “It is postemergence use that causes most crop injury” and selects for resistant weeds, Freese says.
For its part, Dow says that “rates of herbicide application per acre of corn will not increase with our new technology package.” Without the new traits, farmers would still need to apply an ever-greater amount of herbicides to control weeds resistant to glyphosate. In addition, farmers would have to resort to cultivation practices that could increase soil erosion and pollution.
A group of U.S. growers organized as the Save Our Crops Coalition has asked USDA to take a close look at the problem of damage from 2,4-D drift. In a statement, the group, which includes fruit and vegetable growers, says “SOCC appreciates Dow’s substantial efforts to develop a low-volatility formulation of 2,4-D.” But, it adds, “an environmental impact statement should be conducted regarding the approval of the entire class of synthetic auxin-tolerant crops.”
For now, groups for and against the introduction of the new herbicide-tolerant crops are waiting on a ruling from USDA, which wrapped up its public comment period on the 2,4-D trait at the end of April.
MSU’s Shaw is already looking ahead. “Herbicide resistance is a sociological problem more than a physiological problem. It’s about the practices that people choose or choose not to follow.” He says that companies bear a major responsibility to ensure the adoption of good stewardship practices in their direct sales role with the grower. “They have the best chance to educate them. It’s where the rubber meets the road.” ◾
- Chemical & Engineering News
- ISSN 0009-2347
- Copyright © American Chemical Society

http://www.pathslesstravelled.com/2012/02/roundup-modern-miracle-or-man-made.html
Allan - you are correct, farmers are now advised to walk their fields regularly and check for weeds, and to check for early signs of weed resistance. After the crop is harvested, farmers may have left weeds to grow and go to seed, but now they have to guard against that. It is more labor, and there aren't many hands available now in the industrial agriculture areas of the Midwest.
It behooves the populace to begin to educate themselves, and then make a choice about how to safely feed thier family. Personaly, my family and I are opting out of buying foods that are produced by companies that use GMO crops. It may be inconvienent at times, but unitl we know for certain the effects of GMO foods, we will continue to do so.
I urge studies by reputable companies, independent of either FDA or chemical corp. ties. Perhaps then we will get a true version of exactly how these crops may be altering the environment, not to mention what they may be doing to us.
Compare two studies (links pasted at the end of my remarks) two only of the many studies, findable online without particular research skill... in necessary defence against disinformation, and in light of Monsanto's history, well documented, of suppressing negative test results... and for the sake of self, loved ones, man's world community and earth.. please read the many backgrounders on Monsanto's usurious and criminally culpable business practices.That a Monsanto executive is now a senior advisor to the FDA puts the credibility of the entire American political system in correct focus. One can only assume profit derived from mortality, and bilateral medical treatments of lethal and non lethal conditions/diseases resulting from Roundup and genetically modified food is factored to some advantage or otherwise intended. Bear in mind U.S. ranking on world health issues, post natal child mortality, deaths per capita due to various preventable and systemic diseases... as tabulated by both international and U.S. agencies, is far behind many third world counties. Just who does the FDA or U.S. Government elite care about? Michael R. Taylor's appointment has been vigorously opposed to no avail.
Pointedly, EU regulators and Monsanto have been exposed for hiding Glyphosate Toxicity. The European Commission approved glyphosate knowing, as Monsanto did, that it causes birth defects, while the public were kept in the dark, the herbicide must now be banned. Dr Eva Sirinathsinghji and Dr. Mae-Wan Ho
A damning report co-authored by an international group of scientists and researchers for non-government organisation Open Earth Source (OES) reveals that studies from industry including those from Monsanto since the 1990s showed glyphosate caused birth defects. The European Commission approved the herbicide in full knowledge of those findings.
Efforts by the U.S.Government to force Monsanto products into the EU have been undertaken.
The information available at this link must be known
http://www.i-sis.org.uk/EU_Regulators_Monsanto_Glyphosate_Toxicity.php
By Catherine Lagrange and Marion Douet
LYON/PARIS | Mon Feb 13, 2012 3:29pm EST
LYON/PARIS (Reuters) - A French court on Monday declared U.S. biotech giant Monsanto guilty of chemical poisoning of a French farmer, a judgment that could lend weight to other health claims against pesticides.
At... http://www.infowars.com/help-stop-former-monsanto-vp-from-attaining-top-position-at-the-fda/S.
D. Wells, Natural News,February 3, 2012.. One may read of the careers of former Monsanto executives, Taylor among them. Taylor 'worked for Monsanto before he left to join a law firm that has since gained FDA approval of Monsantos artificial growth hormone.
Links to important information can be found at this site http://bestmeal.info/monsanto/facts.shtml
As referred to in my opening remarks..two studies.
1.
Regulatory Toxicology and Pharmacology
Volume 31, Issue 2, April 2000, Pages 117165
I have posted two more addresses, each with a brief excerpt from published research papers that find results opposite to Monsanto's recently published 'proof' of the supposed safety, therefore desirability of Roundup. Roundup is highly toxic.
http://intranet.catie.ac.cr/intranet/posgrado/Agricultura%20Ecol%C3%B3gica/AE-512/Lit%20reviews/Moraes%20Natashia%20Diseno/articulos/Glyphosate_Fact_Sheets.pdf
Glyphosate is a broad-spectrum herbicide widely used to kill unwanted plants both in agriculture and in nonagricultural landscapes. Estimated use in the U.S. is between 19 and 26 million pounds per year.
Most glyphosate-containing products are either made or used with a surfactant, chemicals that help glyphosate to penetrate plant cells.
Glyphosate-containing products are acutely toxic to animals, including humans. Symptoms include eye and skin irritation, cardiac depression, gastrointestinal pain, vomiting, and accumulation of excess fluid in the lungs. The surfactant used in a common glyphosate product (Roundup) is more acutely toxic than glyphosate itself; the combination of the two is yet more toxic.
In animal studies, feeding of glyphosate for three months caused reduced weight gain, diarrhea, and salivary gland lesions. Lifetime feeding of glyphosate caused excess growth and death of liver cells, cataracts and lens degeneration, and increases in the frequency of thyroid, pancreas, and
liver tumors.
Glyphosate-containing products have caused genetic damage in human blood cells, fruit flies, and onion cells.
Glyphosate causes reduced sperm counts in male rats, a lengthened estrous cycle in female rats, and an increase in fetal loss together with a decrease in birth weights in their offspring.
It is striking that laboratory studies have identified adverse effects of glyphosate or glyphosate-containing products in all standard categories of toxicological testing.
Two serious cases of fraud have occurred in laboratories conducting toxicology and residue testing for glyphosate and glyphosate-containing products.
------------------------------------------------
Advertised as herbicides that can "eradicate weeds and unwanted grasses effectively with a high level of environmental safety,"1 glyphosate-based herbicides can seem like a silver
bullet to those dealing with unwanted vegetation. However, an independent, accurate evaluation of their health and environmental hazards can draw conclusions very different than those presented by these advertisements. The following summary of glyphosate's hazards is intended to serve that purpose. It will appear in two parts: Part 1 discusses the toxicology of glyphosate, its metabolites, and the other ingredients of glyphosate products and Part 2 will discuss human exposure to glyphosate and its ecological effects.
Glyphosate, N-(phosphonomethyl) glycine (Figure 1), is a post-emergent, systemic, and non-selective herbicide used to kill broad-leaved, grass, and sedge species.2 It has been
registered as a broad spectrum herbicide in the U.S. since 1974 and is used to control weeds in a wide variety of agricultural, lawn and garden, aquatic, and forestry situations.3
Most glyphosate herbicides contain the isopropylamine salt of glyphosate. A related chemical, the sodium salt of glyphosate, acts as a growth regulator in sugar cane and peanuts and is marketed for that purpose. The monoammonium salt of glyphosate is also marketed as an herbicide and growth regulator.4
Glyphosate products are manufactured by Monsanto Company worldwide. The herbicide is marketed under a variety of trade names: Roundup (including Roundup D-Pak, Roundup Lawn and Garden Concentrate, and Roundup Ready-to-Use) and Rodeo are the most common U.S. trade names.2 The sodium salt is sold as Quotamaster. The monoammonium salt is sold as Deploy Dry.2 Other brand names used for the isopropylamine salt are Accord,5 Vision, Ranger, and Sting.2
As an herbicidal compound, glyphosate is unusual in that essentially no structurally related compounds show any herbicidal activity.
2.
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1532045607002086
Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology Part C: Toxicology & Pharmacology
Volume 147, Issue 2, March 2008, Pages 222231
"The toxicity of Roundup, a glyphosate-based herbicide widely used in agriculture, was determined for the Neotropical fish Prochilodus lineatus. The 96 h-LC50 of Roundup was 13.69 mg L 1, indicating that this fish is more sensitive to Roundup than rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) and Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar). These differences should be considered when establishing criteria for water quality and animal well-being in the Neotropical region."