​​​Flag the Technology

June 2016 | 16 min., 05 sec.
by Bob Scott
University of Arkansas

Summary

As the number new technologies for weed control are introduced in the form of herbicide tolerant crops increases, the ability to know what technology is grown in which field is becoming more important and more complex. This presentation will detail a program developed at the University of Arkansas, called Flag the Technology, which provides growers, consultants and commercial applicators a simple but effective means of identifying fields based on their herbicide tolerance technology. The program works across geographies, crops and state lines. It is also adaptable to new technologies as they emerge. This presentation will illustrate how the Flag the Technology program works, where to find up to date information and how to apply this program to your farm or business. Use of the Flag the Technology system will help prevent or minimize the impact of drift and help prevent the miss-application of herbicides to the wrong fields.

About the Presenter

Bob ScottBob Scott has focused on weed control in rice, soybean, and wheat for 14 years, including herbicide resistance, technology development, herbicide symptomology, and herbicide drift. The Flag the Technology program, initiated in 2011, was deve​loped as a response to problems with off-target herbicide movement and field misidentification. Dr. Scott has a BS in Agronomy from Oklahoma State, an MS in Weed Science from Oklahoma State, and a PhD in Weed Science from Mississippi State. He has worked at American Cyanamid/BASF, Technical Service (1997–2002) and at the University of Arkansas, Cooperative Extension Service (2002–present).​

Contact Information:
Email: bscott@uaex.edu

Sponsorship

In 2020, Grow webcasts had more than 110,000 views. Help support our mission to provide comprehensive high-quality, science-based resources to and for plant health researchers and practitioners at no cost.

PDMR submission guidelines are available online.

LEARN MORE

Plant Health Progress is a peer-reviewed multidiciplinary, online journal of applied plant health.

LEARN MORE