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Strawberries and Caneberries
 
University of California Agriculture and Natural Resources Agriculture and Natural Resources Blogs
THU, APR 25 2024
22:45:38
Comments:
by Will
on March 1, 2013 at 7:25 AM
Why is the Beleaf trial done at 6 oz per acre and not the labeled 2.8 oz per acre?
by Mark Bolda
on March 1, 2013 at 10:41 AM
Hi Will,  
Excellent question to which I have an answer and to which I will add even more. 6 oz per acre is what the sponsor asked us to do, and since the study was done previous to Beleaf getting a label in strawberries, it's a pretty sure bet 6 oz what they (FMC) intended but it went down in the regulatory process.  
Likewise, having attended the research exchange with Dow this past Wednesday, it looks like the rate in strawberries for sulfoxaflor will be dropped by the EPA from 5.7 as we had in the study to 4.5 oz. Dow maintains that this shouldn't haven't a material effect on efficacy, but of course this is something which we will test.
by Javier
on March 15, 2013 at 11:08 AM
About how long must we wait to see results from each of these products? Does one work faster than the other? More specifically how fast does malathion work?
Reply by Mark Bolda
on March 15, 2013 at 5:07 PM
Hi Javier,  
 
So I asked Hillary Thomas about it, and here's what she writes:  
 
"Both Sulfoxaflor and Tolfenpyrad have contact activity in addition to their primary modes of action, so under good coverage both should have some observable effects within 24-48 hours after application. I am not sure as to the duration of residual activity we can realistically expect under field conditions. We did not design our study to look at direct effects but I’m sure the companies have good data on this.  
 
That being said, coverage, applications conditions such as weather and insect behavior patterns, the insecticide’s residual activity and any synergisms with other materials that they have been tank mixed with may increase or decrease time until results are observed.  
 
Basically, they are not going to have a long delay like IGRs before the insect dies, but residual activity may cause additional mortality that has a larger population effect."
by Mary
on October 9, 2014 at 9:42 AM
Hello, I'm trying to reach someone about obtaining permission to use the above photo of the strawberry field being sprayed. NOAA Climate.gov intends to publish an article about the use of NOAA climate and weather data to inform farmers about when it's likely for strawberry fruit rot to break out. Is the above photo in the public domain? Thanks!
 
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