News

A widely-used agricultural chemical sprayed on fruits and vegetables to prevent fungal disease is also killing beneficial ...
As pea fungicide season approaches, learn to differentiate mycosphaerella from bacterial blight to ensure effective disease ...
Last March at the Conservation Tillage and Technology Conference in Ada, Morgan Goodnight, a Ph.D. candidate advised by Dr.
One of the culprits behind brown spots is inconsistent watering. Too much water, not enough water, and watering at the wrong ...
FMC launches Tremisia fungicide in Ukraine, bringing fluindapyr tech to EMEA growers battling major crop diseases.
Tremisia ® fungicide combines FMC's proprietary fluindapyr molecule with flutriafol, delivering a dual mode of action to help ...
With product and application costs totaling between $30 and $40 per acre, farmers will be taking a harder look at where they make the investment this season.
Macquarie University researchers reveal that chlorothalonil, still commonly sprayed on American and Australian produce, cripples insect fertility by more than a third at residue levels typically found ...
Insects exposed to low levels of chlorothalonil suffer major reproductive harm. Its continued use threatens pollination and ...
Where the fungicide is used Although banned in the European Union, chlorothalonil is extensively applied to Australian crops to control fungal diseases such as mildews and leaf blights. The ...