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Herbicide-resistant

Degradation or Transformation. Degradation or transformation of a herbicide by soil microbes or by abiotic means has a significant influence not only on the herbicide s fate in the environment but also on the compound s efficacy. Herbicides that are readily degraded by soil microbes or other means may have a reduced environmental impact but may not be efficacious. Consider the phenomenon of herbicide-resistant soils. In these cases, repeated application of a given herbicide has led to a microbial population with an enhanced ability to degrade that herbicide (252,253). This results in a decrease or total loss of the ability of the herbicide to control the weed species in question in a cost-effective manner. [Pg.48]

Chemical, cultural, and mechanical weed control practices have been relatively successful ia reducing yield losses from weeds (448). However, herbicide-resistant weed populations, soil erosion, pesticide persistence ia the environment, and other problems associated with technologies used (ca 1993) to control weeds have raised concerns for the long-term efficacy and sustainability of herbicide-dependent crop production practices (449). These concerns, coupled with ever-increasing demands for food and fiber, contribute to the need for innovative weed management strategies (450). [Pg.55]

DNA construct will often contain an effect gene and a selectable marker gene (such as antibiotic or herbicide resistance), both of which are bracketed by promoter and terminator sequences. A plasmid vector carries this cassette of genetic information into the plant genome by one of the above methods. [Pg.655]

In fields where some weeds were cleared using herbicides, other, more herbicide-resistant, species have appeared, such as common horsetail, coltsfoot, foxtail, wild oats, false wheat, etc. As a result of herbicide use, scratchweed, which cannot be destroyed by any herbicide, is making inroads into cereal crops, and chamomile has taken over rapeseed [6]. Using herbicides on rice fields caused the spread of wild, pesticide-resistant, low-yield forms of red-grain rice. [Pg.120]

Friesen, L.F., Nelson, A.G. and Van Acker, R.C. (2003). Evidence of contamination of pedigreed canola (Brassica napus) seedlots in western Canada with genetically engineered herbicide resistance traits . Agron J, 95, 1342-1347. [Pg.486]

Hall, L., Topinka, K., Huffman, J., Davis, L. and Good, A. (2000). Pollen flow between herbicide-resistant Brassica napus is the cause of multiple-resistant B. napus volunteers. Weed Sci, 48, 688-694. [Pg.486]

Legere, A. (2005). Risks and consequences of gene flow from herbicide-resistant crops canola (Brassica napus L) as a case study , Pest Manag Sci., 61, 292-300. [Pg.487]

Rieger, M.A., Lamond, M., Preston, C., Powles, S.B. and Roush, R.T. (2002). Pollen-mediated movement of herbicide resistance between commercial canola fields, Science, 296, 2386-2388. [Pg.488]

Snow, A.A., Andersen, B. and Jorgensen, R.B. (1999). Costs of transgenic herbicide resistance introgressed from Brassica napus into weedy B. rapa. Mol. Ecol., 8, 605-615. [Pg.488]

Brazier M, Cole DJ, Edwards R (2002) O-Glucosyltransferase activities toward phenolic natural products and xenobiotics in wheat and herbicide-resistant and herbicide-susceptible black-grass (Alopecurus myosuroides). Phytochemistry 59 149-156... [Pg.200]

Herbicide market, 13 285-286 Herbicide-resistant crops (HRCs),... [Pg.428]

Stalker, D.M., McBride, K.E., and MalyJ, L.D. Herbicide resistance in transgenic plants expressing a bacterial detoxification gene. Science (Washington, DC), 242(4877) 419-423, 1988. [Pg.1727]

Herbicide-resistant and pesticide-resistant crops should avoid soil erosion and limit the spread of synthetic herbicides and pesticides. Modified crops may also provide heat-stable monounsaturated oleic acid, avoiding the problem of heat-unstable poljainsaturated fetty acids that give unhealthy trans-fatty acids as side products of industrial hydrogenation (Mazur 1999). On the longer term, biotechnology may also provide renewable fuel and raw chemicals that may replace petroleum. [Pg.283]

The EPA is involved in the regulation process if the transgenic plant expresses a pest- or herbicide-resistant engineered trait in addition to a biopharmaceutical. [Pg.180]

In an attempt to help farmers prevent the onset of resistance in the weeds on their land the Herbicide Resistance Action Committee (HRAC) has produced a table of herbicide classes by mode of action (anon. 1996). This table is designed to tell the grower which compounds... [Pg.41]

From Herbicide Resistance Action Committee Classification of Herbicides by Mode of Action. WSSA - Weed Science Society of America. [Pg.43]

Herbicide resistance is becoming a problem in many situations. The rush of compounds that interfere with branched chain amino acid biosynthesis has meant that a very high area of land has been treated with compounds that have the same mode of action. The application... [Pg.132]

Padgette, S. R., Re, D. B., Barry, G. F. el al. (1994). New weed control opportunities development of soybeans with a Roundup Ready gene. In Herbicide-resistant Crops Agricultural, Economics, Environmental, Regulatory, and Technologycal Aspects, ed. S. O. Duke. Boca Raton, FL CRC Press. [Pg.68]

Brimner, T.A., Gallivan, G.J. and Stephenson, G.R. (2005) Influence of herbicide-resistant canola on the environmental impact of weed management. Pestic Manage Sci, 61, 47—... [Pg.449]

Zeng, L. and Baird, W. V. (1997). Genetic basis of dinitroaniline herbicide resistance in a highly resistant biotype of goosegrass (Eleusine indica). J. Hered. 88, 427-432. [Pg.262]

Transgenic plants containing a nitrilase specific for the herbicide bromoxynil (= 3,5-dibromo-4-hydroxybenzonitrile)have also been developed [93] the Cal-gene company transformed tobacco plants with the bacterial Klebsiella ozaenae gene encoding nitrilase [94] that detoxifies the herbicide by hydrolysis (conversion of bromoxynil to 3,5-dibromo-4-hydroxybenzoic acid), resulting in the establishment of the herbicide-resistant transgenic plants. [Pg.62]


See other pages where Herbicide-resistant is mentioned: [Pg.248]    [Pg.252]    [Pg.144]    [Pg.152]    [Pg.654]    [Pg.655]    [Pg.655]    [Pg.233]    [Pg.471]    [Pg.252]    [Pg.253]    [Pg.221]    [Pg.24]    [Pg.261]    [Pg.78]    [Pg.27]    [Pg.41]    [Pg.56]    [Pg.57]    [Pg.248]    [Pg.252]    [Pg.1519]    [Pg.217]    [Pg.220]    [Pg.75]    [Pg.8]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.221 ]




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Herbicidal resistance

Herbicides resistance

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