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Waterhemp Resists Soil-Applied Herbicides With One Gene Threatening Corn Belt Crop Production
Waterhemp, the aggressive weed threatening Corn Belt crop production, is throwing curveballs once again, according to researchers at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign. The weed has famously developed resistance to not one or two, but seven herbicide sites-of-action classes, nearly exhausting the chemical tools farmers can use to defend their livelihood.
Latest Research Articles
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Why You Should Customize Your Company Shirt
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Olive Oil Price Hike Causes Wave of Opportunistic Illegal Loggers, Grove Robbers Outside Athens
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Brown Snake Suspected of Killing French Backpacker in Australia
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Forever Chemicals: 71% of Wisconsin Private Wells Contaminated With Low PFAS Levels
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Dense Smoke, Fog Cause Multi-Vehicle Accident on Interstate 10 New Orleans; One Death Reported
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Frozen Iguana Season: Iguanas Fall From Trees as Temperatures in Florida Drop for Winter
Bobbit Worm: What is the Killer Worm in the Sea?
Bolivian Beaked Toad Belongs to New Species, 20-Year DNA Sequence Corrects Decades of Misidentification
Rollercoaster Severe Weather Forces Texas Pecan Trees to Dangerously Self-Prune at the Wrong Time
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Florida Alligator Attack: Alligator Bites Woman's Head While Snorkeling in Ocala
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Northern Greenland's Huge Glaciers At Risk Due To Warming Oceans, Study Finds
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Africa: 0.01% Of Funds Spent To Combat Dangerous Air Quality, International Action Urged