National summit on strategies to manage herbicide-resistant weeds [electronic resource] : proceedings of a workshop / organized by the Planning Committee for a National Summit on Strategies to Manage Herbicide-Resistant Weeds, Board on Agriculture and Natural Resources, Division on Earth and Life Studies, National Research Council of the National Academies.
National Summit on Strategies to Manage Herbicide-Resistant Weeds (2012 : Washington, D.C.), issuing body.; National Research Council (U.S.). Planning Committee for a National Summit on Strategies to Manage Herbicide-Resistant Weeds, issuing body.; National Research Council (U.S.). Board on Agriculture and Natural Resources, issuing body.
2012
SB951.4 .N38 2012eb
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Title
National summit on strategies to manage herbicide-resistant weeds [electronic resource] : proceedings of a workshop / organized by the Planning Committee for a National Summit on Strategies to Manage Herbicide-Resistant Weeds, Board on Agriculture and Natural Resources, Division on Earth and Life Studies, National Research Council of the National Academies.
Meeting Name
ISBN
9780309265560 paperback
0309265568 paperback
9780309265577 electronic book
0309265568 paperback
9780309265577 electronic book
Published
Washington, District of Columbia : National Academies Press, [2012]
Copyright
©2012
Language
English
Description
1 online resource (66 pages) : illustrations
Call Number
SB951.4 .N38 2012eb
Summary
"Preserving the efficacy of herbicides and of herbicide-resistance technology depends on awareness of the increasing resistance of weeds to herbicides used in agriculture and coordinated action to address the problem by individuals at the farm level and beyond. This summit served as a venue to bring the attention of important stakeholders to the issue and as an opportunity for experts from diverse disciplines to strategize in a coordinated way to address herbicide-resistant weeds. In convening stakeholders for this event, participants took a step toward a recommendation from the 2010 National Research Council report The Impact of Genetically Engineered Crops on Farm Sustainability in the United States that federal and state government agencies, private-sector technology developers, universities, farmer organizations, and other relevant stakeholders collaborate to document emerging weed-resistance problems and to develop cost-effective resistance-management programs and practices that preserve effective weed control. The summit provided the opportunity for stakeholders to explore the scientific basis of the emergence of herbicide resistance and to consider different perspectives on both opportunities and barriers to overcoming the problem of herbicide-resistant weeds. National Summit on Strategies to Manage Herbicide-Resistant Weeds contains a brief synopsis of key points made by each speaker at the summit."--Publisher's description.
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Includes bibliographical references.
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Description based on print version record.
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Table of Contents
Welcome
Herbicide resistance in weeds: what is the nature of the problem?
The epidemiology of herbicide resistance
The Australian experience of managing herbicide resistance and its contrasts with the United States
Best management practices to control and combat resistance
Addressing the pressing problem of herbicide resistance
Panel 1: The impediments to using best management practices
A social science perspective on weed management practices
Panel 2: What approaches are most likely to encourage the adoption of best management practices?
The land-grant approach.
Herbicide resistance in weeds: what is the nature of the problem?
The epidemiology of herbicide resistance
The Australian experience of managing herbicide resistance and its contrasts with the United States
Best management practices to control and combat resistance
Addressing the pressing problem of herbicide resistance
Panel 1: The impediments to using best management practices
A social science perspective on weed management practices
Panel 2: What approaches are most likely to encourage the adoption of best management practices?
The land-grant approach.