Abstract

In the wake of thousands of complaints of damage to crops in the U.S. from the herbicide dicamba drifting off neighboring fields, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and pesticide makers have reached an agreement to impose restrictions on the herbicide’s use. Dicamba products sold for the 2018 growing season will be classified as restricted use, meaning they can be applied only by a certified applicator with special training. Other changes include limiting dicamba spraying to when winds are less than 16 km/hour, restricting spraying to certain times of the day, and requiring farmers to keep records of dicamba use. Farmers are increasingly spraying dicamba on soybeans and cotton that have been genetically engineered to tolerate it, as weeds are becoming resistant to other herbicides such as glyphosate. But soybeans that have not been genetically engineered to tolerate dicamba are particularly susceptible to its damage. State agencies in Arkansas, Illinois, Missouri,

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