Non-crop post-emergent weed killer launched

Reading Time: 2 minutes

Published: June 17, 2010

ClearView, a selective control for annual and perennial broadleaf weeds, invasive plants and shrubs, has been cleared for use in Canada — only not in field crops.

Dow AgroSciences Canada on Wednesday announced registration for the new post-emergent product’s use to control weeds and shrubs on rights-of-way, industrial land, rangeland, permanent pasture and other "non-crop areas."

Options to controlling weeds and shrubs in such areas are "limited," Dow Agro marketing manager Jerry Olechowski said in a release.

"Mechanical removal is time-consuming and disruptive to the ecosystem. ClearView will help industry effectively manage broadleaf weeds and invasive plants, and it has a favourable environmental profile."

Read Also

Cow and calves graze in eastern Manitoba. Photo: Geralyn Wichers

Klassen: Western Canadian calf markets surge on New World screwworm fears

For the week ending July 12, Western Canadian yearling markets traded steady to $5 higher compared to seven days earlier. Calves weighing 550-800 pounds were quoted $5 lower to as much as $10 higher.

ClearView, a granular Group 4 and 2 combination of aminopyralid and metsulfuron-methyl, "will establish a new benchmark in roadside and right-of-way weed and shrub control," he said, noting its control of plants such as dandelion, tansy and flixweed.

It’s also billed as "the first and only industrial vegetation management herbicide in Canada with registered claims to provide 12- and 24-month control of weed and shrub species," according to Barry Gibbs, a Dow Agro product registration manager.

ClearView can be applied alone or tank-mixed with products such as 2,4-D or glyphosate for broader-spectrum control in a "variety of vegetation management situations."

The herbicide’s label recommends it "for use on areas where loss of broadleaf forage plants, including legumes, can be tolerated. It shouldn’t be sprayed near "desirable" vegetation or spots where the product may be washed into contact with desirable plants’ roots, such as sidewalks or driveways, the company said.

Hay cut from treated grass, in the year of application, should only be used on-farm to feed livestock, the label warned.

Manure or compost from animals fed the treated hay should only be used on registered-use sites — again, "where the loss of broadleaf forage plants, including legumes, can be tolerated."

The label allows for only one application of ClearView per growing season, at a rate no higher than 230 grams per hectare. Areas treated for 24 months of control should be treated no more than every second year, the company said.

explore

Stories from our other publications