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Dicamba Resistance: Enlarging and Preserving Biotechnology-Based Weed Management Strategies
Author(s) -
Mark Behrens,
Nedim Mutlu,
Sarbani Chakraborty,
Razvan Dumitru,
Wen Zhi Jiang,
Bradley J. LaVallee,
Patricia L. Herman,
Thomas E. Clemente,
Donald P. Weeks
Publication year - 2007
Publication title -
science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 12.556
H-Index - 1186
eISSN - 1095-9203
pISSN - 0036-8075
DOI - 10.1126/science.1141596
Subject(s) - dicamba , microbiology and biotechnology , weed , weed control , herbicide resistance , resistance (ecology) , biology , agriculture , agronomy , crop , business , ecology
The advent of biotechnology-derived, herbicide-resistant crops has revolutionized farming practices in many countries. Facile, highly effective, environmentally sound, and profitable weed control methods have been rapidly adopted by crop producers who value the benefits associated with biotechnology-derived weed management traits. But a rapid rise in the populations of several troublesome weeds that are tolerant or resistant to herbicides currently used in conjunction with herbicide-resistant crops may signify that the useful lifetime of these economically important weed management traits will be cut short. We describe the development of soybean and other broadleaf plant species resistant to dicamba, a widely used, inexpensive, and environmentally safe herbicide. The dicamba resistance technology will augment current herbicide resistance technologies and extend their effective lifetime. Attributes of both nuclear- and chloroplast-encoded dicamba resistance genes that affect the potency and expected durability of the herbicide resistance trait are examined.

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