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New pre-emergence herbicides – opportunities and challenges
https://grdc.com.au/resources-and-publications/grdc-update-papers/tab-content/grdc-update-papers/2021/07/new-pre-emergence-herbicides-opportunities-and-challenges27 Jul 2021: • There are many old and new pre-emergent herbicides available, but most are designed for annual ryegrass control • Choice of herbicide should consider soil type, seeding system, dry seeding, soil organic matter and likely rainfall after
- image:
- https://grdc.com.au/__data/assets/image/0038/375887/brandmark_landscape.png
- a:
- Grains Research and Development Corporation
- b:
- Grains Research and Development Corporation
- Date:
- 27/07/2021, 2021-07-27 00:00:00, 2021-07-12, 2021-07-13
- e:
- new pre-emergence herbicides – opportunities and challenges, summary
- aauthor:
- Christopher Preston (School of Agriculture, Food & Wine, University of Adelaide)
- f:
- text/html
- rdarea:
- Crop Protection
- H:
- 3176e12b764d0d7601c5ac954101c9fe
- j:
- https://grdc.com.au
- l:
- en-AU
- issueno:
- New pre-emergence herbicides – opportunities and challenges
- title:
- New pre-emergence herbicides – opportunities and challenges
- tags:
- • pre-emergent herbicide, barley grass, dry sowing.
- p:
- Grains Research and Development Corporation
- aissueno:
- 07
- thumbfocus:
- thumb-focus-center
- sregion:
- South
- s:
- • pre-emergent herbicide, barley grass, dry sowing.
- ctype:
- Update Paper
- sstate:
- South Australia
- asummary:
- • There are many old and new pre-emergent herbicides available, but most are designed for annual ryegrass control • Choice of herbicide should consider soil type, seeding system, dry seeding, soil organic matter and likely rainfall after
-
Harvest Weed Seed Control – getting the best results
https://grdc.com.au/resources-and-publications/grdc-update-papers/tab-content/grdc-update-papers/2021/07/harvest-weed-seed-control-getting-the-best-results27 Jul 2021: • Regardless of your choice of tool for harvest weed seed control (HWSC), it will only deal with the weed seeds that enter the front of the harvester. • The amount of weed seeds that enter the header front depends on the season, the weed
- image:
- https://grdc.com.au/__data/assets/image/0038/375887/brandmark_landscape.png
- a:
- Grains Research and Development Corporation
- b:
- Grains Research and Development Corporation
- Date:
- 27/07/2021, 2021-07-27 00:00:00, 2021-07-12, 2021-07-13
- e:
- harvest weed seed control – getting the best results, summary
- aauthor:
- Chris Davey (YP Ag, WeedSmart)
- f:
- text/html
- rdarea:
- Crop Protection
- H:
- 8f4bb177ff7415cef68bd88a9757ede9
- j:
- https://grdc.com.au
- l:
- en-AU
- issueno:
- Harvest Weed Seed Control – getting the best results
- title:
- Harvest Weed Seed Control – getting the best results
- tags:
- • chaff lining, chaff decking, weed seed impact mill, positive straw discharge, stripper front.
- p:
- Grains Research and Development Corporation
- aissueno:
- 07
- thumbfocus:
- thumb-focus-center
- sregion:
- South
- s:
- • chaff lining, chaff decking, weed seed impact mill, positive straw discharge, stripper front.
- ctype:
- Update Paper
- sstate:
- South Australia
- asummary:
- • Regardless of your choice of tool for harvest weed seed control (HWSC), it will only deal with the weed seeds that enter the front of the harvester. • The amount of weed seeds that enter the header front depends on the season, the weed
-
Wild radish fact sheet - GRDC
https://grdc.com.au/resources-and-publications/all-publications/factsheets/2021/wild-radish-fact-sheet26 Jul 2021: Wild radish is a widespread broadleaf weed in Australia and is found in almost all grain-growing regions.
- a:
- Grains Research and Development Corporation
- b:
- Grains Research and Development Corporation
- Date:
- 2021-07-26 00:00:00
- e:
- wild radish fact sheet, summary
- f:
- text/html
- H:
- ba10e5a4cb81ec70c9cadc1d4cd51d05
- I:
- https://grdc.com.au/__data/assets/image/0013/432121/cover-image.png
- j:
- https://grdc.com.au
- l:
- en-AU
- issueno:
- Wild radish fact sheet
- title:
- Wild radish fact sheet
- p:
- Grains Research and Development Corporation
- aissueno:
- 2021
- thumbfocus:
- thumb-focus-center
- sregion:
- National
- s:
- wild radish, factsheet
- ctype:
- Factsheet
- asummary:
- Wild radish is a widespread broadleaf weed in Australia and is found in almost all grain-growing regions.
-
https://groundcover.grdc.com.au/crops/cereals/are-long-coleoptile-wheats-an-early-sowing-game-changer
https://groundcover.grdc.com.au/crops/cereals/are-long-coleoptile-wheats-an-early-sowing-game-changer26 Jul 2021:
- ArticleSummary:
- Changing climate and increasing enterprise size are driving the need for new plant traits that maximise yield potential under these changing conditions. The long coleoptile trait is one example.
- LastUpdatedDate:
- 19700101
- Date:
- 20210726090000
- ArticlePubDate:
- 26 Jul 2021
- TitlePosition:
- middle-right
- ArticleSubCategory:
- Cereals
- ArticleCaption:
- Dr Greg Rebetzke and his team from CSIRO Agriculture and Food have been working with breeding companies to introduce new climate-adaptive traits into commercial wheat varieties. Traits such as long coleoptiles, weed competitiveness and short-season
- I:
- https://groundcover.grdc.com.au/__data/assets/image/0025/447028/varieties/thumb550x367.jpg
- ArticleKeywords:
- genetics, long coleoptile, climate change, early sowing, sowing deep, chasing moisture
- ArticleCategory:
- Crops
- title:
- Are long coleoptile wheats an early sowing game-changer?
- url:
- https://groundcover.grdc.com.au/crops/cereals/are-long-coleoptile-wheats-an-early-sowing-game-changer
- CoreTextUser:
- 400598
- sregion:
- National
- ImageFocusPoint:
- 20%
- tab:
- News
- ctype:
- GroundCover Supplement
- ArticleProjectCode:
- CSP156-003RTX, CSP1506-005RTX
- ArticleAuthor:
- Dr Sue Knights
- ArticleSupplement:
- Sowing seeds of success, July-August 2021
- ArticleAssetID:
- 447024
- ArticlePhotographer:
- Nicole Baxter
-
https://groundcover.grdc.com.au/weeds-pests-diseases/pests/exotic-pest-a-miner-issue-for-the-grains-industry
https://groundcover.grdc.com.au/weeds-pests-diseases/pests/exotic-pest-a-miner-issue-for-the-grains-industry25 Jul 2021:
- ArticleSummary:
- Serpentine leafminers are a serious threat to crops that rely on the visual appearance of their foliage for market acceptance and can significantly impact yields for crops like potatoes, but are they a threat to grain crops?
- LastUpdatedDate:
- 19700101
- Date:
- 20210725090000
- ArticlePubDate:
- 25 Jul 2021
- TitlePosition:
- middle-left
- ArticleSubCategory:
- Pests
- ArticleCaption:
- Adult serpentine leafminer. Flies are approximately 2mm in length, black with yellow markings.
- I:
- https://groundcover.grdc.com.au/__data/assets/image/0020/448022/varieties/thumb550x367.jpg
- ArticleKeywords:
- grdc, research, pests, leafminers, cropping, yield, threat, flies, management, larvae
- ArticleCategory:
- Weeds, Pests and Diseases
- title:
- Exotic pest a ‘miner’ issue for the grains industry?
- url:
- https://groundcover.grdc.com.au/weeds-pests-diseases/pests/exotic-pest-a-miner-issue-for-the-grains-industry
- CoreTextUser:
- 424819
- sregion:
- National
- ImageFocusPoint:
- 10%
- tab:
- News
- ctype:
- Online Only
- ArticleAuthor:
- Kym McIntyre, Bill Gordon, Grains Farm Biosecurity Officers
- ArticleAssetID:
- 448018
- ArticlePhotographer:
- Central Science Laboratory, Harpenden, British Crown, Bugwood.org
-
https://groundcover.grdc.com.au/weeds-pests-diseases/pests/monitoring-needed-to-improve-wheat-aphid-knowledge
https://groundcover.grdc.com.au/weeds-pests-diseases/pests/monitoring-needed-to-improve-wheat-aphid-knowledge24 Jul 2021:
- ArticleSummary:
- Researchers are racing to build their knowledge of Russian wheat aphid in southern Australia’s winter cropping cycle. GRDC investment has allowed a team from Cesar Australia and the South Australian Research and Development Institute to assess the
- LastUpdatedDate:
- 19700101
- Date:
- 20210724090000
- ArticlePubDate:
- 24 Jul 2021
- TitlePosition:
- middle-left
- ArticleSubCategory:
- Pests
- ArticleCaption:
- Russian wheat aphid on a wheat leaf.
- I:
- https://groundcover.grdc.com.au/__data/assets/image/0028/446923/varieties/thumb550x367.jpg
- ArticleEdition:
- Issue 153, July-August 2021
- ArticleKeywords:
- Russian wheat aphid, RWA, cropping, wheat, pests, SARDI, David Foxx, Maarten van Helden, aphid, aphid hosts
- ArticleCategory:
- Weeds, Pests and Diseases
- title:
- Monitoring needed to improve wheat aphid knowledge
- url:
- https://groundcover.grdc.com.au/weeds-pests-diseases/pests/monitoring-needed-to-improve-wheat-aphid-knowledge
- CoreTextUser:
- 400580
- sregion:
- South
- ImageFocusPoint:
- 50%
- tab:
- News
- ctype:
- GroundCover
- ArticleProjectCode:
- UOA1805-018RTX
- ArticleAuthor:
- David Foxx
- ArticleAssetID:
- 446919
- ArticlePhotographer:
- GRDC
-
https://groundcover.grdc.com.au/agronomy/frost-management/paddock-maps-track-jack-frost
https://groundcover.grdc.com.au/agronomy/frost-management/paddock-maps-track-jack-frost23 Jul 2021:
- ArticleSummary:
- A new model-based system developed by CSIRO researchers enables growers to map frost movement over paddocks. Minimum temperature maps of paddocks offer the chance to bring damaging frost episodes into clearer focus on a farm scale.
- LastUpdatedDate:
- 19700101
- Date:
- 20210723090000
- ArticlePubDate:
- 23 Jul 2021
- TitlePosition:
- bottom-left
- ArticleSubCategory:
- Frost Management
- ArticleCaption:
- CSIRO principal research scientist Uday Nidumolu with a weather station used to generate minimum temperature maps showing frost movement across paddocks at Jabuk, South Australia.
- I:
- https://groundcover.grdc.com.au/__data/assets/image/0027/446940/varieties/thumb550x367.jpg
- ArticleEdition:
- Issue 154, September-October 2021
- ArticleKeywords:
- paddock, maps, Jack Frost, frost, mapping, tool, modelling, Uday Nidumolu, CSIRO, weather station, temperature logger, damage, assessment
- ArticleCategory:
- Agronomy
- title:
- Paddock maps track Jack Frost
- url:
- https://groundcover.grdc.com.au/agronomy/frost-management/paddock-maps-track-jack-frost
- CoreTextUser:
- 400588
- sregion:
- National
- ImageFocusPoint:
- 40%
- tab:
- News
- ctype:
- GroundCover
- ArticleProjectCode:
- CSP1507-009RTX
- ArticleAuthor:
- Clarisa Collis
- ArticleAssetID:
- 446932
- ArticlePhotographer:
- David Gobbett, CSIRO
-
Mechanical soil amelioration alters soil biology, soilborne pathogen and nematode pests of cereal crops: what are the implications?
https://grdc.com.au/resources-and-publications/grdc-update-papers/tab-content/grdc-update-papers/2021/02/mechanical-soil-amelioration-alters-soil-biology,-soilborne-pathogen-and-nematode-pests-of-cereal-crops-what-are-the-implications22 Jul 2021: Growers in Western Australia have widely adopted mechanical soil amelioration and liming to manage subsoil constraints like acidity, compaction, water repellence and herbicide-resistant weeds. Common mechanical soil amelioration techniques include
- image:
- https://grdc.com.au/__data/assets/image/0038/375887/brandmark_landscape.png
- a:
- Grains Research and Development Corporation
- b:
- Grains Research and Development Corporation
- Date:
- 2021-07-22 02:46:00, 2021-07-22 02:46:00, 2021-07-15, 2021-07-23
- e:
- mechanical soil amelioration alters soil biology, soilborne pathogen and nematode pests of cereal crops: what are the implications?, summary
- aauthor:
- Sarah Collins (DPIRD, Western Australia), George Mwenda (DPIRD, Western Australia), Carla Wilkinson (DPIRD, Western Australia), Daniel Hüberli (DPIRD, Western Australia), Sean Kelly (DPIRD, Western Australia), Kris Gajda (DPIRD, Western Australia),
- f:
- text/html
- H:
- db43b544f401865ecd92334e154bca36
- j:
- https://grdc.com.au
- l:
- en-AU
- issueno:
- Mechanical soil amelioration alters soil biology, soilborne pathogen and nematode pests of cereal crops: what are the implications?
- title:
- Mechanical soil amelioration alters soil biology, soilborne pathogen and nematode pests of cereal crops: what are the implications?
- tags:
- soil amelioration, root lesion nematode, rhizoctonia bare patch, soilborne pathogen, acidic soil, soil biology
- p:
- Grains Research and Development Corporation
- aissueno:
- 02
- thumbfocus:
- thumb-focus-center
- sregion:
- West
- s:
- soil amelioration, root lesion nematode, rhizoctonia bare patch, soilborne pathogen, acidic soil, soil biology
- ctype:
- Update Paper
- sstate:
- Western Australia
- asummary:
- Growers in Western Australia have widely adopted mechanical soil amelioration and liming to manage subsoil constraints like acidity, compaction, water repellence and herbicide-resistant weeds. Common mechanical soil amelioration techniques include
-
https://groundcover.grdc.com.au/innovation/precision-agriculture-and-machinery/workshops-help-growers-begin-pa-journey
https://groundcover.grdc.com.au/innovation/precision-agriculture-and-machinery/workshops-help-growers-begin-pa-journey22 Jul 2021:
- ArticleSummary:
- Knowing where to start is often the hardest part for those considering precision agriculture, which GRDC-supported workshops are aimed at addressing
- LastUpdatedDate:
- 19700101
- Date:
- 20210722090000
- ArticlePubDate:
- 22 Jul 2021
- TitlePosition:
- bottom-right
- ArticleSubCategory:
- Precision Agriculture and Machinery
- ArticleCaption:
- Precision agriculture (PA) expert Tim Neale delivering one of the ‘Hands on Precision Agriculture Workshops’ at Kingaroy in Queensland. PA uptake in the northern region has lagged behind other states, making it important to give growers a
- I:
- https://groundcover.grdc.com.au/__data/assets/image/0031/446827/varieties/thumb550x367.jpg
- ArticleEdition:
- Issue 153, July-August 2021
- ArticleKeywords:
- PA, workshops, Tim Neale, Matt Kelly, Julian Cross, NDVI, variable rate
- ArticleCategory:
- Innovation
- title:
- Workshops help growers begin PA journey
- url:
- https://groundcover.grdc.com.au/innovation/precision-agriculture-and-machinery/workshops-help-growers-begin-pa-journey
- CoreTextUser:
- 400594
- sregion:
- North
- ImageFocusPoint:
- 30%
- tab:
- News
- ctype:
- GroundCover
- ArticleProjectCode:
- ART1903-001OPX, SPA2001-001SAX
- ArticleAuthor:
- Rebecca Thyer
- ArticleAssetID:
- 446823
- ArticlePhotographer:
- Tim Neale
-
https://groundcover.grdc.com.au/agronomy/soil-and-nutrition/ripping-duplex-soils-may-reduce-waterlogging
https://groundcover.grdc.com.au/agronomy/soil-and-nutrition/ripping-duplex-soils-may-reduce-waterlogging21 Jul 2021:
- ArticleSummary:
- Evidence from trials and growers suggests ripping non-dispersive duplex soils can help reduce waterlogging.
- LastUpdatedDate:
- 19700101
- Date:
- 20210721090000
- ArticlePubDate:
- 21 Jul 2021
- TitlePosition:
- middle-left
- ArticleSubCategory:
- Soil and Nutrition
- ArticleCaption:
- Deep ripping trial in left-hand side of paddock compared to unripped paddock on the right. Deep sand during very wet season. East of Esperance.
- I:
- https://groundcover.grdc.com.au/__data/assets/image/0025/448009/varieties/thumb550x367.jpg
- ArticleKeywords:
- grdc, research, water, waterlogging, non-dispersive soils, nitrogen, nutrients, yield, topsoil, ripping, drainage
- ArticleCategory:
- Agronomy
- title:
- Ripping duplex soils may reduce waterlogging
- url:
- https://groundcover.grdc.com.au/agronomy/soil-and-nutrition/ripping-duplex-soils-may-reduce-waterlogging
- CoreTextUser:
- 424819
- sregion:
- West
- ImageFocusPoint:
- 50%
- tab:
- News
- ctype:
- Online Only
- ArticleProjectCode:
- PLT1909-001SAX, SCF2005-001SAX
- ArticleAuthor:
- Alisa Bryce and Wayne Pluske
- ArticleAssetID:
- 448005
- ArticlePhotographer:
- Quenten Knight, Agronomy Focus
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