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originally posted by: markosity1973
a reply to: D8Tee
Agreed.
Glyphosate is a poison, but it's so popular because it's not as bad as others.
But one can avoid using it in some cases if they are switched on.
Case and point, instead of spraying fields or before cultivation, my Dad always turned the field over, left it for a week or so until the weed seeds in the soil started germinating then rotary hoed the entire area to a fine tilth.
This always worked well to give the crop (maize or sorghum) a chance to germinate and grow faster than any weeds. Because the crop is so dense, and weeds that germinated were soon choked out by the maize anyways.
What will it be replaced with?
originally posted by: bigfatfurrytexan
a reply to: dreamingawake
I live in a part of the world where an invasive plant is causing trouble (Salt Cedar). So i get the need to eradicate and/or control species.
But Roundup....i predict it will be off the market in 10 years. Ther eis a massive collapse of insect species that is currently under reported or just flat out not reported. Bees aren't the only "at risk" insect species. And I suspect we will find pesticides and herbicides at fault.
originally posted by: bigfatfurrytexan
I live in a part of the world where an invasive plant is causing trouble (Salt Cedar). So i get the need to eradicate and/or control species.
But Roundup....i predict it will be off the market in 10 years. Ther eis a massive collapse of insect species that is currently under reported or just flat out not reported. Bees aren't the only "at risk" insect species. And I suspect we will find pesticides and herbicides at fault.
originally posted by: D8Tee
What will it be replaced with?
You take away herbicides and crop yields are going to go WAY down.
Roundup, if you look into it, is not as toxic as it's replacements.
originally posted by: D8Tee
a reply to: aliensanonymous
Like what?
There are natural herbicide replacements.
TextConsiderations
Organic herbicides all work if you have enough volume and concentration to directly contact the weeds. However, these herbicides are expensive and may not be affordable for commercial crop production at this time. Cost in 2010 was about $400 to $600 an acre for broadcast application, which may be considerably more expensive than hand weeding. Moreover, because these materials lack residual activity, repeat applications will be needed to control perennial weeds or new flushes of weed seedlings. We see these herbicides eventually being used commercially with camera-based precision applicators that “see” weeds and deliver herbicides only to the weeds, not to the crop or bare ground.