Eastern cereal growers get new fungicide

Reading Time: < 1 minute

Published: May 14, 2009

Chemical manufacturer Chemtura Canada has picked up registration for a “novel” fungicidal seed treatment for Eastern Canada’s cereal growers.

Rancona Apex, which will be distributed in the East by Norac Concepts and Engage Agro, marks a “step change” for the cereals seed treatment market, according to Norac’s Bob Chyc.

The product’s “micro-dispersion” formulation makes it easier to use and more flexible for seed companies’ treatment requirements, he said in a release Wednesday. It gives Rancona “low viscosity, excellent flowability and minimal sediment,” the company said.

Read Also

Joel Merkosky, president of Johnston’s Grain, shows off some of the firm’s brochures at its booth at the Ag in Motion 2025 show in Langham, Sask.Joel Merkosky, president of Johnston’s Grain, attended Ag in Motion 2025 to explain his company’s move into regenerative agriculture. Photo: Sean Pratt

Agriculture chemical company embraces regenerative farming

Johnstone’s Grain sees the sale of regenerative agriculture products as the future

Designed for use on cereal crops, Rancona Apex’s active ingredient is the systemic/contact fungicide ipconazole, a seed-applied product registered against a “broad spectrum” of seed and seedling diseases on wheat, barley, rye and oats, Norac said.

The distributors said in their release that Rancona Apex shows high efficacy against a “majority” of seed and soil-borne fungi in the plant pathogenic fungal classes of zygomycetes, ascomycetes, basidiomycetes and fungi imperfecti (deuteromycetes), which cause seed decay, damping-off and seedling blight.

“Rancona Apex has proved itself to be outstanding on wheat, combining excellent control of a range of important seed and soil-borne diseases, including true loose smut and fusarium seedling blight as well as foot rots,” said Mike McFatrich, Chemtura’s North American business lead for seed enhancements, in Norac/Engage Agro’s release.

explore

Stories from our other publications