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Herbicide Resistance in Weeds:
What is the Nature of the Problem?
Micheal D. K. Owen
Iowa State University
Weeds represent the most important pest complex threat to global food security;
they cause more loss of productivity and economic cost to humanity when compared to all
other pest complexes combined. Furthermore, more agricultural acres are treated with
herbicides to address the production issues caused by weeds than the acreage treated with
all other pesticide classes combined. However, weeds have not been seen as a serious
problem, given the general success of using herbicides to manage widespread weed
problems. When genetically engineered herbicide resistance was introduced into many
major crops, the concerns for weeds further declined, as weed control was perceived as
simple and convenient. The historic perspective would suggest that weed control should
not be considered as either simple or convenient given the ability of weeds to evolve
resistance to all herbicides, including those for which genetically engineered traits were
developed in crops. Currently there are 388 herbicide-resistant weed biotypes represented
by 208 weed species.1 These evolved resistances include resistance to all of the
commercially available herbicide mechanisms of action. One or more of these resistances
may be represented in a given species. Over the last decade, resistance in (currently) 23
weed species has evolved to glyphosate, and the production of corn, cotton, and soybean is
threatened by the increasing numbers of glyphosate-resistant weeds in an increasing
number of crop fields. It is important to recognize that the ever-increasingly important
problem with herbicide-resistant weeds is not an herbicide problem. Furthermore,
evolution of herbicide resistance in weeds is not a genetically engineered crop problem.
The evolution of herbicide resistance in weeds represents a behavioral problem with the
management and application of herbicides.
The changes in weed populations brought forward by the use of herbicides
represent the selection of the fittest as described by Charles Darwin more than 100 years
ago. The evolution of herbicide-resistant weed biotypes, however, illustrates Darwinian
1Numbers current as of May 2012.
3
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4 NATIONAL SUMMIT ON STRATEGIES TO MANAGE HERBICIDE-RESISTANT WEEDS
evolution in fast forward. Given the predominance of using herbicides to control weeds, to
the exclusion of other more diverse tactics and strategies, the production of crops has
become simplified and places an incredible selection pressure on the weed populations
that exist within the crop production systems. Essentially, agriculture is very quickly
selecting for the pests that are best adapted to the tactics and strategies used to control
them.
Specific weeds with evolved resistances to many herbicide mechanisms of action are
becoming increasingly important. While there are several extremely important weed
species that have evolved resistance to herbicides, common waterhemp (Amaranthus
tuberculatus syn. rudis) is of particular note, given its widespread presence in the Midwest
United States. Common waterhemp exhibits a number of characteristics that make it
particularly "weedy"; these characteristics include but are not limited to a dioecious
reproductive habit (obligate outcrossing), high seed productivity, opportunistic
germination, and the demonstrable ability to evolve resistance to herbicides. Common
waterhemp populations have evolved resistance to triazine herbicides, the ALS-inhibitor
herbicides, the protoporphyrinogen oxidase (PPO)-inhibitor herbicides, the
hydroxyphenylpyruvate dioxygenase (HPPD)-inhibitor herbicides, the growth-regulator
herbicides, and glyphosate. There are specific populations of common waterhemp that
have evolved multiple resistances to as many as five different herbicide mechanisms of
action. Given that, to date, most of the evolved herbicide resistances are dominant traits;
these evolved traits will spread quickly. The speed is enhanced by a failure of those
involved in agriculture to adopt alternative strategies for the management of weeds.
In the opinion of the author, it is clear that, thus far, agriculture is not accepting the
importance of herbicide resistance nor willing to react to the need for changes in weed-
management tactics and strategies. There continue to be disconnects between the long-
term perspectives of herbicide-resistant weeds and the short-term concerns about
profitability for agricultural producers as well as within agricultural chemical companies.
There are also important questions about whether herbicide resistance can and should be
regulated. However, there should be no question about whether herbicide resistance
should be managed. Evolved resistance to herbicides in important weed species will
continue to be an increasing problem that changes at an increasing rate unless stewardship
is implemented in all crop-production systems immediately.
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HERBICIDE RESISTANCE IN WEEDS: WHAT IS THE NATURE OF THE PROBLEM? 5
KEY POINTS
Herbicide
Herbicideresistance
resistanceisis
not aa
not new
newproblem.
problem.
Globally,
Globally,resistance
resistancehas
hasevolved
evolvedfor all
for herbicide
all mechanisms
herbicide of
mechanisms action.
of action.
The
Therate ofof
rate resistance evolution
resistance has
evolution accelerated;
has more
accelerated; farmers
more relyrely
farmers on single
on single
herbicides
herbicidesto
tocontrol
controlweeds.
weeds.
Herbicide
Herbicideresistance isis
resistance not anan
not herbicide or or
herbicide genetic-engineering problem
genetic-engineering butbut
problem a a
behavioral
behavioralproblem.
problem.
Waterhemp (Amaranthus tuberculatus syn. rudis), courtesy of
the U.S. Department of Agriculture, Agricultural Research Service.
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