After Years of Herbicide Use, Roundup-Resistant Superweeds Are Evolving to Invade U.S. Fields

Tuesday, May 4, 2010 - 12:25 in Earth & Climate

U.S. farmers are dealing with a superweed epidemic, and it's not as groovy as it sounds on first read. Ubiquitous use of the weed killer Roundup over time has spawned herbicide-resistant superweeds , much as heavy use of antibiotics over past decades has bred drug-resistant germs and bacteria. Roundup -- which was created by Monsanto but is now sold generically under the common name glyphosate -- has been a boon for agriculture over the last 20 years. Genetically modified crops are immune to its poison, meaning farmers can spray down their entire fields with the stuff, killing off invasive weeds while leaving their harvests in perfect order. It degrades quickly, and cuts down on erosion, agricultural fuel cost, and carbon emissions because farmers don't have to plow their fields under each season. Related ArticlesInserting Weed Genes To Protect Crops From Global Warming Lower Yields from GM CropsRobo-Suit Will Help Aging Japanese...

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