"Large-scale industry and industrially pursued large-scale 
agriculture have the same effect. If they are originally 
distinguished by the fact that the former lays waste and ruins 
labour-power and thus the natural power of man, whereas the latter 
does the same to the natural power of the soil, they link up in 
the later course of development, since the industrial system 
applied to agriculture also enervates the workers there, while 
industry and trade for their part provide agriculture with the 
means of exhausting the soil."

--Karl Marx, Capital V.3

NY Times May 3, 2010
Farmers Cope With Roundup-Resistant Weeds
By WILLIAM NEUMAN and ANDREW POLLACK

DYERSBURG, Tenn. — For 15 years, Eddie Anderson, a farmer, has 
been a strict adherent of no-till agriculture, an environmentally 
friendly technique that all but eliminates plowing to curb erosion 
and the harmful runoff of fertilizers and pesticides.

But not this year.

On a recent afternoon here, Mr. Anderson watched as tractors 
crisscrossed a rolling field — plowing and mixing herbicides into 
the soil to kill weeds where soybeans will soon be planted.

Just as the heavy use of antibiotics contributed to the rise of 
drug-resistant supergerms, American farmers’ near-ubiquitous use 
of the weedkiller Roundup has led to the rapid growth of tenacious 
new superweeds.

To fight them, Mr. Anderson and farmers throughout the East, 
Midwest and South are being forced to spray fields with more toxic 
herbicides, pull weeds by hand and return to more labor-intensive 
methods like regular plowing.

“We’re back to where we were 20 years ago,” said Mr. Anderson, who 
will plow about one-third of his 3,000 acres of soybean fields 
this spring, more than he has in years. “We’re trying to find out 
what works.”

Farm experts say that such efforts could lead to higher food 
prices, lower crop yields, rising farm costs and more pollution of 
land and water.

“It is the single largest threat to production agriculture that we 
have ever seen,” said Andrew Wargo III, the president of the 
Arkansas Association of Conservation Districts.

The first resistant species to pose a serious threat to 
agriculture was spotted in a Delaware soybean field in 2000. Since 
then, the problem has spread, with 10 resistant species in at 
least 22 states infesting millions of acres, predominantly 
soybeans, cotton and corn.

The superweeds could temper American agriculture’s enthusiasm for 
some genetically modified crops. Soybeans, corn and cotton that 
are engineered to survive spraying with Roundup have become 
standard in American fields. However, if Roundup doesn’t kill the 
weeds, farmers have little incentive to spend the extra money for 
the special seeds.

Roundup — originally made by Monsanto but now also sold by others 
under the generic name glyphosate — has been little short of a 
miracle chemical for farmers. It kills a broad spectrum of weeds, 
is easy and safe to work with, and breaks down quickly, reducing 
its environmental impact.

Sales took off in the late 1990s, after Monsanto created its brand 
of Roundup Ready crops that were genetically modified to tolerate 
the chemical, allowing farmers to spray their fields to kill the 
weeds while leaving the crop unharmed. Today, Roundup Ready crops 
account for about 90 percent of the soybeans and 70 percent of the 
corn and cotton grown in the United States.

But farmers sprayed so much Roundup that weeds quickly evolved to 
survive it. “What we’re talking about here is Darwinian evolution 
in fast-forward,” Mike Owen, a weed scientist at Iowa State 
University, said.

Now, Roundup-resistant weeds like horseweed and giant ragweed are 
forcing farmers to go back to more expensive techniques that they 
had long ago abandoned.

Mr. Anderson, the farmer, is wrestling with a particularly 
tenacious species of glyphosate-resistant pest called Palmer 
amaranth, or pigweed, whose resistant form began seriously 
infesting farms in western Tennessee only last year.

Pigweed can grow three inches a day and reach seven feet or more, 
choking out crops; it is so sturdy that it can damage harvesting 
equipment. In an attempt to kill the pest before it becomes that 
big, Mr. Anderson and his neighbors are plowing their fields and 
mixing herbicides into the soil.

That threatens to reverse one of the agricultural advances 
bolstered by the Roundup revolution: minimum-till farming. By 
combining Roundup and Roundup Ready crops, farmers did not have to 
plow under the weeds to control them. That reduced erosion, the 
runoff of chemicals into waterways and the use of fuel for tractors.

If frequent plowing becomes necessary again, “that is certainly a 
major concern for our environment,” Ken Smith, a weed scientist at 
the University of Arkansas, said. In addition, some critics of 
genetically engineered crops say that the use of extra herbicides, 
including some old ones that are less environmentally tolerable 
than Roundup, belies the claims made by the biotechnology industry 
that its crops would be better for the environment.

“The biotech industry is taking us into a more pesticide-dependent 
agriculture when they’ve always promised, and we need to be going 
in, the opposite direction,” said Bill Freese, a science policy 
analyst for the Center for Food Safety in Washington.

So far, weed scientists estimate that the total amount of United 
States farmland afflicted by Roundup-resistant weeds is relatively 
small — seven million to 10 million acres, according to Ian Heap, 
director of the International Survey of Herbicide Resistant Weeds, 
which is financed by the agricultural chemical industry. There are 
roughly 170 million acres planted with corn, soybeans and cotton, 
the crops most affected.

Roundup-resistant weeds are also found in several other countries, 
including Australia, China and Brazil, according to the survey.

Monsanto, which once argued that resistance would not become a 
major problem, now cautions against exaggerating its impact. “It’s 
a serious issue, but it’s manageable,” said Rick Cole, who manages 
weed resistance issues in the United States for the company.

Of course, Monsanto stands to lose a lot of business if farmers 
use less Roundup and Roundup Ready seeds.

“You’re having to add another product with the Roundup to kill 
your weeds,” said Steve Doster, a corn and soybean farmer in 
Barnum, Iowa. “So then why are we buying the Roundup Ready product?”

Monsanto argues that Roundup still controls hundreds of weeds. But 
the company is concerned enough about the problem that it is 
taking the extraordinary step of subsidizing cotton farmers’ 
purchases of competing herbicides to supplement Roundup.

Monsanto and other agricultural biotech companies are also 
developing genetically engineered crops resistant to other herbicides.

Bayer is already selling cotton and soybeans resistant to 
glufosinate, another weedkiller. Monsanto’s newest corn is 
tolerant of both glyphosate and glufosinate, and the company is 
developing crops resistant to dicamba, an older pesticide. 
Syngenta is developing soybeans tolerant of its Callisto product. 
And Dow Chemical is developing corn and soybeans resistant to 
2,4-D, a component of Agent Orange, the defoliant used in the 
Vietnam War.

Still, scientists and farmers say that glyphosate is a 
once-in-a-century discovery, and steps need to be taken to 
preserve its effectiveness.

Glyphosate “is as important for reliable global food production as 
penicillin is for battling disease,” Stephen B. Powles, an 
Australian weed expert, wrote in a commentary in January in The 
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

The National Research Council, which advises the federal 
government on scientific matters, sounded its own warning last 
month, saying that the emergence of resistant weeds jeopardized 
the substantial benefits that genetically engineered crops were 
providing to farmers and the environment.

Weed scientists are urging farmers to alternate glyphosate with 
other herbicides. But the price of glyphosate has been falling as 
competition increases from generic versions, encouraging farmers 
to keep relying on it.

Something needs to be done, said Louie Perry Jr., a cotton grower 
whose great-great-grandfather started his farm in Moultrie, Ga., 
in 1830.

Georgia has been one of the states hit hardest by 
Roundup-resistant pigweed, and Mr. Perry said the pest could pose 
as big a threat to cotton farming in the South as the beetle that 
devastated the industry in the early 20th century.

“If we don’t whip this thing, it’s going to be like the boll 
weevil did to cotton,” said Mr. Perry, who is also chairman of the 
Georgia Cotton Commission. “It will take it away.”

William Neuman reported from Dyersburg, Tenn., and Andrew Pollack 
from Los Angeles.
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