Alternatives Eyed For Methyl Bromide

U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) scientists trying to help Florida growers find a replacement for methyl bromide are studying an alternative soil treatment that uses molasses as one of its ingredients.

Researchers with USDA’s Agricultural Research Service (ARS) are examining whether a cropping system that uses molasses to stimulate microbial activity could be used to replace the popular fumigant. They also are studying recently developed fumigants. The work, presented at the recent Annual International Research Conference on Methyl Bromide Alternatives and Emissions Reductions, supports the USDA priority of promoting international food security. ARS is USDA’s principal intramural scientific research agency.

Farmers have been using methyl bromide since the 1930s to control a broad spectrum of nematodes, pests, and pathogens. But because methyl bromide depletes the earth’s stratospheric ozone layer, growers worldwide are being required to find a replacement. That’s a tall order in Florida, where the sandy soils limit organic alternatives and the mild winters serve as a safe harbor for many nematodes, weeds, and pathogens.

ARS scientists Erin Rosskopf and Nancy Kokalis-Burelle and former ARS research associate David Butler raised bell peppers and eggplant at the agency’s U.S. Horticultural Research Laboratory in Fort Pierce, FL, to test a combination of composted broiler litter, molasses, and anaerobic soil disinfestation (ASD). In ASD, topsoil is saturated with water and covered with a plastic tarp. Then, a carbon source — in this case molasses — is added to stimulate microbial activity.

The sun-drenched tarp “cooks” the weed seeds in the soil, and the carbon and water increase microbial activity, creating conditions conducive to pest control. As part of the project, ARS scientists Greg McCollum and Joseph Albano, who are also with the Fort Pierce lab, evaluated fruit quality and soil and plant nutrients.

The researchers heated the soil via solarization and treated plots with different levels of the organic materials and different amounts of water. The molasses used was a waste product of the sugar cane processing industry. They planted peppers in the fall and eggplant in the spring, sampled the soil for nematodes, counted nematodes on crop roots, assessed weed populations and soil properties, and measured crop yields.

The scientists found that nematode populations were reduced when treated with molasses and poultry litter, that molasses and poultry litter controlled grass weeds just as well as methyl bromide, and that the solarized treatments heated the soil to levels that were at or just below levels that are lethal for many soil pathogens.

The researchers also are comparing two recently developed fumigants, dimethyl disulfide (DMDS) and methyl iodide, with methyl bromide at two sites, one where they raised delphiniums and the other with caladiums. Preliminary results show the alternatives are just as effective as methyl bromide at suppressing grass weeds and controlling nematodes, but their overall effectiveness depended on the type of cultivar produced.

Read more about this research in the March 2011 issue of Agricultural Research magazine here, or click here for the full USDA-ARS press release.

Source: Dennis O’Brien, USDA-ARS

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Avatar for Anonymous Anonymous says:

As Diane Wells pointed out in her article “Options for Parasitic Nematode Control”there are countless soil-borne microbes that feed on parasitic nematodes.Using all natural, non-toxic biologicals that provide additional benefits such as control of fungal diseases, lower fertilizer usage, lower irrigation demand, higher yiedscertaily makes more sense than subsituting one chemical for another. For additional information visit http://www.douglasspeed.com or call 1-866-680-2565.

Avatar for Anonymous Anonymous says:

I confirm my statements

Avatar for Anonymous Anonymous says:

In 2002/2003 I worked with the UN on a project in Central America to eliminate the use of Methyl Bromide by introducing seedling grafting as an alternative to MB.
The results were unbelieveable! Grafting can be used for watermelon, melon and tomato. If you are interested in learning more about this transplant production system please contact me at [email protected] or 334-655-2409.

Avatar for Anonymous Anonymous says:

Atomic Grow will do the same thing with a simple foliar spray and works on all plants. This is why we are selling to many of the golf courses all over Florida and Georgia. Atomic Grow means particle size not much bigger than atoms. Sugar is a natural ingredient but imagine delivering it to the plant internally through the leaf. Atomic Grow is a much more efficient way of boosting a plants immmune system with multiple benefits.

Avatar for Anonymous Anonymous says:

Atomic Grow carries KeyPlex and other nutrients past Greening blockages in the phloem tissue and bacteria clogged siv-plates of citrus trees. We are working with several Florida growers with outstanding results so far. Atomic Grow’s angstrom sugar particles carry nutrients directly to the root system. We will be advertising about this soon! Call us for a trial. 1-877-344-2001 or 321-557-6219 Direct.

Avatar for Anonymous Anonymous says:

Fumiagnts still offer the best solution in a world where crop/land rotation is a diminishing option. Biological control of complex soil pathogens and nematodes simply does not result in the types of yield and quality we have to achieve in developed farming nations to remain competitive. Integration of Biological with chemical solutions will increasingly be the norm, but for now high efficiency fumigants such as Methyl Iodide remain the economic option. Yes Nutrition is a vital part and I am aware of the tremendous results from Nutriphite and Keyplex on citrus greening affected groves in Florida. I am a proponent of the vector control+ high delivery nutrition+pathogen exclusion approach used in Florida based on sound field science and not academic debate. This approach has worked for many years in South Africa where unlike Florida citrus production is 90% fresh market of which 70% is exported, even with Greening being present for the last 80 years in that country.

Avatar for Anonymous Anonymous says:

In order to remain competitive we must reduce the particle size of the products we are applying to our crops. How much liquid fertilizer is wasted because we didnt get it into the plant where it needs to be. If we can reduce the particle size of the product in the tank by mixing with a plant vascular technology we dont need as much fertilizer and the plants respond with vigor because the nutritionals are readily available in the plant. The water molecule is outdated and expensive. Atomic Grow is a vascular technology that carries foliars directly to the roots. Plants can overcome nematode pathogens easily when the brix levels of the root system is dramatically increased with proper nutritional placement and immediate stress reduction from free flowing translocation system.

Avatar for Anonymous Anonymous says:

As Diane Wells pointed out in her article “Options for Parasitic Nematode Control”there are countless soil-borne microbes that feed on parasitic nematodes.Using all natural, non-toxic biologicals that provide additional benefits such as control of fungal diseases, lower fertilizer usage, lower irrigation demand, higher yiedscertaily makes more sense than subsituting one chemical for another. For additional information visit http://www.douglasspeed.com or call 1-866-680-2565.

Avatar for Anonymous Anonymous says:

I confirm my statements

Avatar for Anonymous Anonymous says:

In 2002/2003 I worked with the UN on a project in Central America to eliminate the use of Methyl Bromide by introducing seedling grafting as an alternative to MB.
The results were unbelieveable! Grafting can be used for watermelon, melon and tomato. If you are interested in learning more about this transplant production system please contact me at [email protected] or 334-655-2409.

Avatar for Anonymous Anonymous says:

Atomic Grow will do the same thing with a simple foliar spray and works on all plants. This is why we are selling to many of the golf courses all over Florida and Georgia. Atomic Grow means particle size not much bigger than atoms. Sugar is a natural ingredient but imagine delivering it to the plant internally through the leaf. Atomic Grow is a much more efficient way of boosting a plants immmune system with multiple benefits.

Avatar for Anonymous Anonymous says:

Atomic Grow carries KeyPlex and other nutrients past Greening blockages in the phloem tissue and bacteria clogged siv-plates of citrus trees. We are working with several Florida growers with outstanding results so far. Atomic Grow’s angstrom sugar particles carry nutrients directly to the root system. We will be advertising about this soon! Call us for a trial. 1-877-344-2001 or 321-557-6219 Direct.

Avatar for Anonymous Anonymous says:

Fumiagnts still offer the best solution in a world where crop/land rotation is a diminishing option. Biological control of complex soil pathogens and nematodes simply does not result in the types of yield and quality we have to achieve in developed farming nations to remain competitive. Integration of Biological with chemical solutions will increasingly be the norm, but for now high efficiency fumigants such as Methyl Iodide remain the economic option. Yes Nutrition is a vital part and I am aware of the tremendous results from Nutriphite and Keyplex on citrus greening affected groves in Florida. I am a proponent of the vector control+ high delivery nutrition+pathogen exclusion approach used in Florida based on sound field science and not academic debate. This approach has worked for many years in South Africa where unlike Florida citrus production is 90% fresh market of which 70% is exported, even with Greening being present for the last 80 years in that country.

Avatar for Anonymous Anonymous says:

In order to remain competitive we must reduce the particle size of the products we are applying to our crops. How much liquid fertilizer is wasted because we didnt get it into the plant where it needs to be. If we can reduce the particle size of the product in the tank by mixing with a plant vascular technology we dont need as much fertilizer and the plants respond with vigor because the nutritionals are readily available in the plant. The water molecule is outdated and expensive. Atomic Grow is a vascular technology that carries foliars directly to the roots. Plants can overcome nematode pathogens easily when the brix levels of the root system is dramatically increased with proper nutritional placement and immediate stress reduction from free flowing translocation system.