Herbicide Increase in GMO Crops Is Causing Increase in Superweeds

03 Oct, 2012

via Washington State University

Jerry McCulley sprays the weed killer glyphosate, or Roundup, on his corn crop in Auburn, Ill. Photo by Seth PerlmanA study pub­lished this week by Washington State University research pro­fes­sor Charles Benbrook finds that the use of her­bi­cides in the pro­duc­tion of three genet­i­cally mod­i­fied herbicide-tolerant crops—cotton, soy­beans and corn—has actu­ally increased. This coun­ter­in­tu­itive find­ing is based on an exhaus­tive analy­sis of pub­licly avail­able data from the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s National Agriculture Statistics Service. Benbrook’s analy­sis is the first peer-reviewed, pub­lished esti­mate of the impacts of genet­i­cally engi­neered (GE) herbicide-resistant (HT) crops on pes­ti­cide use.

In the study, which appeared in the the open-access, peer-reviewed jour­nal “Environmental Sciences Europe,” Benbrook writes that the emer­gence and spread of glyphosate-resistant weeds is strongly cor­re­lated with the upward tra­jec­tory in her­bi­cide use. Marketed as Roundup and other trade names, glyphosate is a broad-spectrum sys­temic her­bi­cide used to kill weeds. Approximately 95 per­cent of soy­bean and cot­ton acres, and over 85 per­cent of corn, are planted to vari­eties genet­i­cally mod­i­fied to be her­bi­cide resistant.

“Resistant weeds have become a major prob­lem for many farm­ers reliant on GE crops, and are now dri­ving up the vol­ume of her­bi­cide needed each year by about 25 per­cent,” Benbrook said.

The annual increase in the her­bi­cides required to deal with tougher-to-control weeds on crop­land planted to GE cul­ti­vars has grown from 1.5 mil­lion pounds in 1999 to about 90 mil­lion pounds in 2011.

Herbicide-tolerant crops worked extremely well in the first few years of use, Benbrook’s analy­sis shows, but over-reliance may have led to shifts in weed com­mu­ni­ties and the spread of resis­tant weeds that force farm­ers to increase her­bi­cide appli­ca­tion rates (espe­cially glyphosate), spray more often, and add new her­bi­cides that work through an alter­nate mode of action into their spray programs.

A detailed sum­mary of the study’s major find­ings, along with impor­tant def­i­n­i­tions of terms used in the study, are avail­able online at http://bit.ly/esebenbrookmajor. Benbrook’s study, “Impacts of genet­i­cally engi­neered crops on pes­ti­cide use in the U.S.—the first six­teen years,” is avail­able online at http://bit.ly/esebenbrook2012.

Source: Washington State University release

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