Black-grass requires a ‘three-pronged’ attack

Black-grass

Black-grass requires a three-pronged attack to promote and develop sustainable management solutions.

Black-grass requires a three-pronged attack to promote and develop sustainable management solutions, according to the main findings arising from an AHDB-funded workshop.

Organised by the BBSRC/AHDB Black-Grass Resistance Initiative (BGRI), the workshop united farmers, industry and researchers to help concentrate the UK’s black-grass management efforts.

Three areas of focus were identified at the workshop: Targeted farmer-to-farmer learning, to optimise management systems in the short term; focused applied research, to provide integrated management solutions in the medium term; and fundamental research, to develop game-changing technologies in the long term.

Coordinated thinking

Dr Paul Gosling, who manages weed research at AHDB, said: “The headline grabbing topic of black-grass has fuelled multiple of avenues of research, conducted within the UK and overseas.

“But this research effort has lacked coordination, meaning progress on managing black-grass has often been too slow and too erratic.  

“The BGRI sought to address this with its multidisciplinary approach, by bringing people together with significant experience of tackling black-grass, from the field to the laboratory, to talk freely and extend the BGRI collaboration ethos right across the industry.”

Targeted farmer-to-farmer learning

In the short term, it was concluded that ‘persistent messaging’ of evidence-based recommendations is required to give growers the confidence to use current management tools.

More effective seed bank and long-term population management was seen as a particular priority, which could be achieved through the increased adoption of weed monitoring and mapping techniques, in conjunction with a greater use of resistance diagnostics and testing.  It was felt that such information could be used to target late drilling, variable seed rates and spring cropping approaches in the worst affected parts of the farm.

Farmer-to-farmer learning was considered as being particularly valuable to help promote new ways of working, especially on heavy land (where management is particularly challenging) and in strategically important areas to reduce further black-grass spread.

Focused applied research

In the medium term, with complete management of black-grass an unlikely scenario, it was recommended that ways to reduce, rather than eliminate, the weed burden should be the focus of applied research, in particular:

  • Diagnostics – to further develop lab- and field-based diagnostics for both target-site and non-target-site resistance
  • Alternative cropping – to understand the impact of spring cropping on black-grass germination, the role of cover crops, the potential of varieties to supress weeds and allelopathy
  • Dormancy – to account for seasonal effects and to find ways to promote synchronous germination
  • Seed destruction and capture – to investigate the potential of ‘weed surfing’, late-season herbicide applications and harvest weed seed control

The need to quantify the economic efficacy of approaches, when used on their own and in combination, across a range of common soil types, was also considered extremely important to help farmers judge which techniques are viable in their systems.

Develop game-changing technologies

In the long term, it was concluded that ‘game-changing’ technologies are needed to reverse the spread of resistant black-grass in the UK.

Dr Paul Neve, who is a principal investigator for BGRI at Rothamsted Research, said: “There are some really exciting, yet high-risk, high-reward, developments in the pipeline.

“Many of these capture the value in emerging areas of science, such as weed genomics, diagnostics, remote sensing, and big data and modelling applications.

“These long-term solutions may be years away, and, until then, it is all about the hard graft associated with combining multiple approaches to keep a lid on the problem.”

The workshop took place on 13 to 14 December 2016 at Rothamsted Research, which receives strategic funding from the BBSRC.

For the latest information on black-grass, visit www.cereals.ahdb.org.uk/blackgrass, www.bgri.info and www.rothamsted.ac.uk/weed-ecology-and-evolution

Contacts

Notes to Editors

Funded by AHDB, the workshop united farmers, agronomists, industry representatives, research funders, policy-makers and research organisations with a significant stake in the management of black-grass.

Organised by BBSRC/AHDB Black-Grass Resistance Initiative (BGRI) researchers, the event provided a secure forum for a frank, open and honest debate to shape priorities for black-grass research and management.

The AHDB project title for the BGRI is Multiple herbicide resistance in grass weeds: from genes to agroecosystems (3807). Duration 2014–2018. The project was awarded £280,000 by AHDB (total £2,800,000, remainder funded by BBSRC). The Project Partners are: University of Newcastle, University of Sheffield, Rothamsted Research, University of Reading, University of Edinburgh and University of York.

AHDB is a statutory levy board, funded by farmers, growers and others in the supply chain. Its purpose is to equip levy payers with independent, evidence-based information and tools to grow, become more competitive and sustainable. Established in 2008 and classified as a Non-Departmental Public Body, it supports the following industries: meat and livestock (cattle, sheep and pigs) in England; horticulture, milk and potatoes in Great Britain; and cereals and oilseeds in the UK. AHDB’s remit covers 75 per cent of total UK agricultural output. Further information on AHDB can be found at www.ahdb.org.uk

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