Abstract

Herbicide resistance is of increasing concern, especially as there is a lack of new modes of action. An assessment of resistance risk has been a key part of the pesticide authorisation process in most European countries since the early 2000's. However, little guidance is provided on how to quantify these risks. The risk matrix described here presents a quantitative approach to the evaluation of the resistance risk posed by the use of herbicides. The inherent, ‘unmodified’ risk is first assessed by ranking herbicides and major target weed species on a scale from low to high resistance risk, based largely on published information. In practice, agronomic management practices (‘modifiers’) will reduce the risk and these are factored into the matrix. Modifiers can include management strategies relating to herbicide use as well as non-chemical methods of weed control. By assigning defined impact factors to possible agronomic modifiers, the overall resistance risk of a herbicide under defined use conditions can be quantified. The approach, although simple, appears robust and produces realistic assessments of the resistance risks associated with four contrasting test scenarios. The aim is to achieve a better harmonisation of herbicide resistance risk assessment across Europe. Although the matrix has a European legislative focus, the approach and principles are relevant in other parts of the world where the extensive use of herbicides is a relatively recent development, and where there is currently limited knowledge and expertise on herbicide resistance and the evaluation of resistance risks.

Highlights

  • Weeds are a major constraint to agricultural production, causing significant agronomic and economic damage

  • The risk posed by a specific herbicide can be estimated from the number of cases of resistance that have evolved to herbicides with the same mode of action (MoA), relative to herbicides with different MoA

  • To classify herbicide active ingredients according to their inherent resistance risk, active ingredients are assigned to their respective herbicide mode of action group (MoA group) as defined by the Herbicide Resistance Action Committee (HRAC)

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Summary

Introduction

Weeds are a major constraint to agricultural production, causing significant agronomic and economic damage. Repeated applications of herbicides with similar modes of action exert a strong selection pressure on target weed populations with the consequence that numerous cases of herbicide resistance have evolved worldwide (Powles and Yu, 2010). The increasing number of resistant weed biotypes is a major concern for agriculture, horticulture and amenity situations, especially as no new herbicide mode of action has been marketed for over 30 years (Duke, 2012; Westwood et al, 2018). To reduce the risk of resistance development, and thereby to prolong the period of effective use of plant protection products for the benefit of both producer and end-user, resistance risk has been assessed during the authorisation process in most European countries since the early 2000's. EPPO (European and Mediterranean Plant Protection Organisation) is an intergovernmental organisation responsible for cooperation and harmonisation in plant protection and has 52-member countries in the European and Mediterranean region (EPPO, 2018)

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