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Seed bank persistence of genetically modified canola in California
Authors:Douglas J. Munier  Kent L. Brittan  W. Thomas Lanini
Affiliation:University of California Cooperative Extension, P.O. Box 697, Orland, CA 95963, USA. djmunier@ucdavis.edu
Abstract:

Introduction

Canola, which is genetically modified (GM) for tolerance to glyphosate, has the potential to become established as a new glyphosate resistant weed, thus reducing the effectiveness of glyphosate.

Methods

Volunteer from dormant canola seeds produced thousands of plants per hectare in the fourth year (2011) following a 2007 crop harvest. This occurred with no additional canola seed production since the 2007 harvest.

Results

Volunteer plants following harvests of annual crops are typically only a problem for the first year after harvest. In California, glyphosate is the core herbicide on over a million hectares of high value row, tree, and vine crops and new glyphosate resistant weeds reduce the effectiveness of glyphosate.

Conclusions

The combination of dormant seed and herbicide resistance makes GM glyphosate-resistant canola a new and difficult California weed which was first observed in the winter of 2009.
Keywords:
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