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Published online by Cambridge University Press:  17 March 2017

K. Neil Harker*
Affiliation:
Research Scientist, Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada, Lacombe Research Centre, 6000 C & E Trail, Lacombe, Alberta, CanadaT4L 1W1
Carol Mallory-Smith
Affiliation:
Professor, Oregon State University, Corvallis, OR 97331-3002
Bruce D. Maxwell
Affiliation:
Professor, Montana State University, Bozeman, MT 59717
David A. Mortensen
Affiliation:
Professor, Pennsylvania State University, University Park, PA 16802
Richard G. Smith
Affiliation:
Associate Professor, University of New Hampshire, Durham, NH 03824
*
*Corresponding author’s E-mail: [email protected]
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Abstract

Weed resistance to herbicides occurs when herbicides are overused and can be mitigated by reducing their use. Consensus on herbicide resistance management strategies is problematic given strong industrial profit motive links in the weed science discipline.

Type
My View
Copyright
© Weed Science Society of America, 2017 

It has recently been suggested that herbicide resistance (HR) is a “wicked” problem (Barrett et al. Reference Barrett, Soteres and Shaw2016; Shaw Reference Shaw2016), i.e., it is a problem “without clear causes or solutions.” To say that HR is a problem without clear causes or solutions is an affront to much that weed scientists know about HR. Almost all weed scientists agree that HR evolves rapidly when the same herbicide mechanism of action is overused. Furthermore, almost all weed scientists agree that one can delay the evolution of a specific HR problem by using a specific herbicide mechanism of action less frequently. Weed science credibility and progress requires admission that herbicides should be used less frequently; integrated herbicide management is not the answer (Harker et al. Reference Harker, O’Donovan, Blackshaw, Beckie, Mallory-Smith and Maxwell2012; Mortensen et al. Reference Mortensen, Egan, Maxwell, Ryan and Smith2012). The real problem is to find suitable herbicide alternatives so growers can use herbicides less often.

It may be correct to suggest that convincing industry and growers to manage HR for long-term sustainability is a “wicked” problem. Jussaume and Ervin (Reference Jussaume and Ervin2016) state that “there is no consensus as to why some growers do not diversify their tactics.” It is difficult to convince growers that the simple, relatively cheap, and very effective herbicide approach should be balanced with approaches that are more complicated and that may be more expensive and less effective. Industry representatives and extension personnel, from whom growers receive a large proportion of their information, are likely to suggest that alternatives to herbicides mean returning to hard times. However, Ervin and Jussaume (Reference Ervin and Jussaume2014) suggest that a “technology-focused approach” to HR management may not only increase HR but also make it worse by “delaying the development of holistic approaches.” Coble and Schroeder (Reference Coble and Schroeder2016) note that it is critical that those suggesting HR management recommendations are “sending the same message and that message is based on sound science.” The message cannot be “we do not know how the problem is caused and we do not know how to solve it.” The message should be clear—practice true integrated weed management and find ways to scale back herbicide use.

Given the fact that no major new herbicide mechanism of action has been registered for almost 25 yr (Duke Reference Duke2012), one might assume that the herbicide industry would wish to “carefully steward” existing herbicides. Unfortunately, true stewardship, which would necessitate limiting sales volume, conflicts with the reality of the herbicide industry’s business model, which necessitates maximizing profit during patent-protection periods. Herbicide registrations and sales practices in the generic (off-patent) herbicide business also are motivated by profit maximization. While the research and development divisions of herbicide companies may view herbicide sales strategies as being at odds with HR management, it is difficult to imagine an effective and long-lasting sales team whose goal is to restrain sales. Sales divisions hire people who are “good at selling things.” Furthermore, should one company decide to practice good stewardship and limit sales volume, it is certain that a competing company would quickly and happily step into the farmer-client and treated-acre sales void. The latter dynamic makes it extremely difficult for companies to cooperate with one another in the interest of preserving herbicide efficacy. Accordingly, it is not surprising that a company with a long-term herbicide stewardship plan has yet to come forward. Herbicide sales strategies are made at the marketing level. Weed scientists who think the herbicide industry will want to forgo profits to maintain product durability are ignoring the overwhelming drivers of business motivation.

This is where the Weed Science Society of America (WSSA) should play the role of a science discipline. As the leading scientific society for researchers who study weeds and their management, the WSSA should be providing “science-based information to the public and policy makers,” as described in their mission statement (WSSA Mission Statement, emphasis added). The science is clear; the only way to prevent or delay HR over the long term is to minimize the use of herbicides. The science is clear, too, that crops can be produced without heavy reliance on herbicides, but this requires diversification of cropping systems and true integrated weed management (Davis et al. Reference Davis, Hill, Chase, Johanns and Liebman2012; Harker et al. Reference Harker, O’Donovan, Turkington, Blackshaw, Lupwayi, Smith, Johnson, Pageau, Shirtliffe, Gulden, Rowsell, Hall and Willenborg2016). Yet, these are not the consistent messages coming from the WSSA or its flagship journals. Why not? The answer is likely due, in large part, to the weed science discipline’s historical legacy and close association with the chemical industry. Indeed, the discipline was born largely out of World War II–era advances in chemistry and the nascent chemical industry it spurred (Zimdahl Reference Zimdahl1991). That the partnership between the science and the industry remains strong today is reflected in the heavy industry representation among the society’s membership at large and among its governing board members, as well as the overwhelming representation by industry among sponsors of the society and its annual meetings (e.g., the six presidential-level sustaining members of WSSA are: BASF, Bayer CropScience, Dow AgroSciences, DuPont, Monsanto, and Syngenta).

We would argue that real solutions to the HR problem will not occur until the industrial profit motive is removed from the dilemma and the science is not conflicted. On the one hand, the herbicide industry directly influences the practices adopted by growers through the markets they have worked to develop with growers and local co-ops (local distributors). On the other hand, the close public–private sector relationship between industry and public sector scientists is another way herbicide-based solutions are reinforced. There is a very real conflict of interest that arises when private sector sources of applied research funds reinforce reliance on herbicidal solutions (Davis et al. Reference Davis, Hall, Jasieniuk, Locke, Luschei, Mortensen, Reichers, Smith, Sterling and Westwood2009). Incentives and regulations need to be explored that are independent of the influence of the herbicide industry. The science is largely in place (Mortensen et al. Reference Mortensen, Egan, Maxwell, Ryan and Smith2012) to create real regulation and incentive programs, not to mention real on-the-ground nonconflicted solutions (e.g., Walsh et al. Reference Walsh, Newman and Powles2013).

Ultimately, growers and their consultants are responsible for the decisions that will significantly delay HR evolution. In the field, where HR evolution occurs, farm-level decisions to accept less short-term profit for longer-term sustainability will have the largest impact on HR management. It will not be an easy transition; herbicides are the easiest and most effective (Maxwell and O’Donovan Reference Maxwell and O’Donovan2007) form of weed management, and externalities associated with their use go largely unaccounted for. Also, their widespread adoption enabled farms to increase in size (MacDonald et al. Reference MacDonald, Penni and Hoppe2013), further challenging tractable, ecologically oriented solutions on larger farms. It is clear that appropriate farm-level HR management decisions are not enhanced when weed scientists suggest HR is a problem without clear causes or solutions. It is also clear that policies and incentives designed to encourage tractable farm-level solutions (Mortensen et al. Reference Mortensen, Egan, Maxwell, Ryan and Smith2012) are not informed by the best science when the nature of the problem and its causes and effects are not represented or are misrepresented. To state there is a consensus among weed scientists that HR is without a known cause or lacks clear solutions is not supported by the growing body of science in ours and in related pest management disciplines.

Footnotes

Associate Editor for this paper: William Vencill, University of Georgia

References

Literature Cited

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