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Published byRuth Palmer Modified over 8 years ago
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SCC-33 National Variety Testing Meeting New Orleans – February 8-10, 2012 Rick Mascagni, LSU AgCenter, St. Joseph, LA Daryl Bowman, NC State
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Genuity Smartstax – Controls ECB, SWCB, SCB, CE, FA, SB, LCSB, WBC, BC, WCR, NCR,MCR/RR2 Genuity VT Triple PRO (GenVT3) – Controls ECB, SWCB, SCB, SCSB, CE, FA, CSB, WCR, NCR, MCR/RR2 Genuity VT Double PRO (VT2) – Controls ECB, SWCB, SCB, SCSB, CE, CSB, FA/RR2 YieldGard VT Triple (VT3)- Controls ECB, SWCB, SCB, WCR, NCR, MCR/RR2
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YieldGard Corn Borer – Controls ECB, SWCB, SCB/RR2 YieldGard Plus – Controls ECB, SWCB, SCB, WCR, NCR, MCR/RR2 YieldGard VT Rootworm/RR2 – Controls WCR, NCR, MCR/RR2
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Agrisure®GT – provides tolerance to in-crop applications of glyphosate- based herbicides Agrisure®GT/CB/LL – provides control against ECBas wella s other insects and is tolerant to glyphosate and glufosinate herbicides Agrisure®3000GT – protects against ECB, CE, WR, NR, MR; suppresses FA, CSB/tolearnt to glyphosate and glufosinate herbicides Agrisure Viptera™ 3111 – protects against ECB, SWCB, SCB, WBC, BC, FA, CE/ tolerant to glyphosate and glufosinate herbicides Herculex I (HX1) – SWB, ECB, SCB, WBC, BC,FA/tolearnt to glufosinate herbicide YHR – pyramid of HX1 and YieldGard corn borer Note: There are several species of corn rootworm in the Southeast. Southern corn rootworm is the most prevalent species. None of the above “rootworm” products are not effective against southern corn rootworm.
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Cruiser Extreme 250 Cruiser (thiamethoxam) @ 0.25 mg ai/seed Three fungicides: Apron XL®, Maxim® XL, Dynasty® Cruiser 1250 Cruiser (thiamethoxam) @ 1.25 mg ai/seed Three fungicides: Apron XL®, Maxim® XL, Dynasty®
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Poncho/Votivo Insecticide and a new biological mode of action with a unique bacteria strain that lives and grows with young roots, creating a living barrier strain that prevents important nematode species from reaching the roots Acceleron Fungicides: Ipconazole (Vortex), Metalaxyl (Apron XL, Ridomil), Trifloxystrobin (Stratego, Compass) Insecticide: Clothianidin (Poncho 250)
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DARYL BOWMAN
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TOM BECHMAN AUGUST 14, 2007 FARM FUTURES 60 CORN HYBRIDS PARENT AND 2 VERSIONS ONLY A FEW VERSIONS WERE NOT THE SAME AS PARENTS
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I see no harm in combining/subbing RR versions with non-RR versions. I'd be hesitant to do the same for bt or LL versions. I see no harm - even some good - in head-to-head testing of conventional vs GMO vs stacks in the same trials. The data might save some farmers $$$$ as there is apt to be little difference in some locations and the rootworm bts (and some cb bts as well) may actually come at a yield cost. I doubt that most of your corn tests are accurate enough to detect such differences, as they tend to be small and our errors (relative to the Midwest) are large/huge.
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1) One version of a hybrid should be entered. 2) Second version should be considered the same as previous year because the base genetics are the same.
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Have no good solution…..sometimes version changes have an anticipated effect on performance, sometime they won’t, so not sure you can make a hard and fast rule…..simplest and cleanest is probably to accept each version as a different product and not combine for multi- location or multi-year summaries. The version changes probably won’t slow down….I’m know that we, and I’m sure others, have a pipeline that will continue to launch new traits in all crops.
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