Kochia control suffers another blow, North Dakota study finds

Two popular products widely used on the Prairies seem less effective

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Published: January 20, 2023

“The potential loss of [these products] as effective herbicides for kochia control is staggering because affected farmers will have limited control options remaining.” – Brian Jenks.

Some kochia populations in western North Dakota likely have developed resistance to commonly used pre-plant burndown herbicides, a North Dakota State University study has found.

For many years, no-till farmers have used Aim (carfentrazone) and Sharpen (saflufenacil) either just before or just after planting to control emerged kochia and other annual weeds.

On the Prairies, carfentrazone is the active ingredient in Aim EC, Revenge, InStep and IPCO C-Zone. Saflufenacil is the active ingredient in Heat, Heat Complete, Smoulder and Voraxor.

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“Kochia has been difficult to control during the prolonged drought of the past several years,” said Brian Jenks, weed scientist with the university’s research extension center.

“Kochia thrives in dry conditions, and herbicides can be less effective when plants are drought-stressed. However, the NDSU study showed that recent lack of control is not due solely to drought stress, since plants survived these herbicides with little damage in the greenhouse.”

The two actives are classified as Group 14 herbicides that control weeds by inhibiting the protoporphyrinogen oxidase enzyme, which leads to disruption of plant cell membranes. Susceptible weeds typically die within a few days.

In the NDSU study, a known susceptible kochia population was easily controlled by carfentrazone and saflufenacil. However, carfentrazone showed little activity on four kochia populations from across western North Dakota. Saflufenacil caused some necrosis on kochia leaves and stunted growth, but most plants survived and had two to eight inches of regrowth two weeks after treatment.

“The potential loss of [these products] as effective herbicides for kochia control is staggering because affected farmers will have limited control options remaining,” said Jenks.

“An extremely important question that still needs to be answered is the effectiveness of other Group 14 herbicides … that are used for residual kochia control.”

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