Utah
Crop Improvement Association Room
320, AgSci Bldg, Utah State University (435)
797-2082
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Vol. 21, #1 January 2002 Logan, UT
2002
ANNUAL
SEED SCHOOL AND SEED INDUSTRY MEETINGS
The
Utah Seed Council and Utah Crop Improvement Association will jointly host the
Utah Seed Industry Annual Meetings and Seed School on Friday, Feb. 15, 2002 in
Brigham City, UT. We will meet at
Bridgerland Applied Technology College on 1100 South (main access road from I-15
to Hwy 89/91 and Logan) in conference room 103, starting at 8:30 a.m. with
light refreshments. See next
page for complete program.
Please
return the enclosed postage-paid card immediately if you plan to attend so
we can make arrangements for the luncheon.
WEEDS,
INVASIVE WEEDS, AND
WEED
CONTROL
Dr. Steve Dewey, USU Extension Weed Specialist
(Report from 2001 Seed School)
Dr. Dewey said that a good, simple, to the point
definition of a weed is any plant that someone will pay him to kill. However, some people have been offended
that some of their favorite plants have been called weeds. For instance, sagebrush has been
included in the book ÒWeeds of the West.Ó
But if your objective is to grow grass for your cows on your ranch, then
sagebrush can interfere with that objective. If the objective for the site is to grow food for deer and
sage grouse, then sagebrush is a very valuable plant and smooth brome and tall
fescue might be the weeds.
Noxious weeds are those designated by governmental
bodies as being especially damaging to ranching or agriculture or wildlands,
and regulations are put in place to prevent the spread of such plants. Invasive weeds are those that crowd out
other desirable plants, but again, such a designation is highly dependent on
the objective for the site. Native
juniper can be considered invasive in some situations. But it is the exotic, noxious, invasive
weeds that are presently getting a lot of attention at the national level. The Invasive Species Council was set up
by U.S. Presidential Executive Order (Feb. 1999) to manage invasive species on
Federal lands, and the Council in turn formed an advisory committee of 32
people to provide expertise. Dr.
Dewey is one of those people. The
national management plan has been approved and can be accessed on the web site,
www.invasivespecies.gov. Basically what it says is that many exotic plants, animals,
insects, etc. are invading the U.S. and identification and control efforts have
to be beefed up to mitigate the serious consequences to environmental and human
health. Federal budgets are
increasing to funnel money to control efforts, and Dr. Dewey is responding to
an increasing number of requests for weed control advise from land management
agencies such as the Forest Service and BLM.
There is a big difference between the concept of
management of an exotic noxious weed and total eradication. Eradication is rarely possible
economically, though there are examples where small infestations of a weed
(i.e., leafy spurge in Sanpete County in the 1930's) were repeatedly treated and
actually eradicated. Much more
common is decreasing the incidence to a point where damage to the environment
is minimal and manageable. Mechanical and bio-control methods are receiving a
lot of emphasis, though herbicides are still the backbone of most efforts.
A difficult issue that is still being discussed and
resolved is where to draw the line on exotic vs. useful vs. invasive and
damaging. Many ornamental plants
that have been purposefully introduced (such as purple loosestrife, Russian
olive and tamarisk) have become extremely damaging to native environments. Some environmental groups have followed
that thought to the extent of wanting to eradicate exotic crop plants such as
tall fescue, wheat, soybeans, etc.
But generally more moderate thought has prevailed, and efforts are
underway to develop criteria and ranking methods that will concentrate efforts
on truly potentially damaging exotics depending on the site that is
impacted. In National Parks, alfalfa
and timothy may be considered undesirable exotics because a fully natural and
native ecosystem is the goal. For
much larger fire rehab projects on BLM and Forest Service lands, there seems to
be more leeway though officially emphasis is placed on using native plant
seed. But non-native (those considered
non-invasive) species may also be used according to seed availability and
economic reality.
As far as weed control in seed production of grasses
and forbs, Dr. Dewey recommended several publications. Specifically, the Tri-State Weed
Management Handbook (Montana, Utah, and Wyoming Extension Services) and the
Pacific NW Handbook for Washington, Oregon, and Idaho are helpful. For national scope, the Meister
Pesticide Guide has a lengthy section on grass seed weed control. Also available are on-line label
sources that list complete pesticide labels (see www.greenbook.net).
All these publications collectively list the herbicides available, cautionary
advise, application rates, timing, etc., for use in compliance with the labels.
One thing to keep in mind is that all herbicides for
grass seed production are not registered for use in all areas of the U.S. A lot of work would have to be done
before a Section 18 (Emergency) or 24C (Special Local Needs) could be applied
for this area, but it is possible.
Some of the promising herbicides not labeled for this area are Karmex
(used in the Northwest with charcoal to protect the seedling grass rows), Dual,
and Prowl.
There are some new herbicides and some old repackaged
herbicides available for grass seed production. Banvel is now being sold as ÒClarity.Ó Glyphosate (Roundup) is now being
marketed by several companies since the patent has run out. A new product is called Frontier. It controls seedling grasses and
broadleaves with a pre-emergence application in established grasses. Stinger and Curtail have a similar
active ingredient to Tordon, but are shorter lived and very active on thistles
and composites such as knapweeds.
As far as herbicides for forbs or wildflowers, Dr.
Dewey could find none that are actually registered for seed production. There are some in use for growing
ornamentals and establishing flower beds that could be effective. The Section 18 or 24C route could be
considered here also.
SEED
ORIGIN AND BLM
RECLAMATION
SEED BIDS
Cindy
Fritz, Boise BLM Seed Warehouse
(Report
from 2001 Seed School)
Cindy Fritz reported that the purpose of the seed
warehouse is to procure seed for reclamation projects in the Great Basin
area. Categories of seed accepted
on bids are 1) Certified, which includes regular Certified Class blue tag for
varieties, and Selected Class (green tag) or Source Identified (yellow tag) for
germplasm accessions either wild collected or grown in a field; 2)
non-certified*; and 3) specified origin (requiring a signed statement of origin
from the collector)*. Certified
seed is preferentially accepted on bids at higher prices (within reason). Wild collected Source Identified seed
is produced following detailed protocols of permitting, site inspection,
warehousing, seed conditioning, and tagging by official seed certification
agencies. (See Utah Crop Improvement Association ÒChecklist for Wildland
Collected SeedÓ and ÒSite ID LogÓ on last page of this newsletter).
Permitting for seed harvest on BLM lands is
unfortunately not uniform as to format or pricing across Districts. However, different permit format
reflects different situations of collection site, species, and protection of
the resource. Several permits on a
non-exclusive basis may be written for some areas, while others are awarded by
bid for exclusive collection.
Areas may be broad or narrow with differing amounts of restrictions as
to harvest methods and vehicle access.
BLM resource personnel may enforce permit particulars, including
location, number of pounds
specified, etc., and it is planned in the next year to step up enforcement
efforts.
Presently, seed is accepted from a generalized zone
including Oregon, Wyoming, Idaho, and northen areas of Utah and Nevada. Plans are to delineate more specific zones
so seed can be matched better to area of use. This may entail greater use of local seed collection
contracts in conjunction with the Source Identification program. Expansion of warehousing capabilities
would facilitate this effort, since emergency bids usually means being less
fussy over seed origin and quality.
The BLM tries to consolidate seed needs into major bid
events, which are published in the Commerce Business Daily and can be accessed
through the BLM website. The
spring bid is intended to fill the warehouse, but emergency bids in the fall
are mainly in response to fire events.
*(Editors
note: It should be pointed out that (non-certified) seed labeled with a variety
name is not verifiable and may not actually be that variety. Therefore, seed procurement bid sheets
of any agency or company should solicit, for example, Goldar, Whitmar, P7 Germplasm, or Anatone Germplasm
bluebunch wheatgrass only as certified seed (blue tag or green tag as applicable). Non-certified bluebunch wheatgrass
should be solicited only as VNS (variety not stated). By the same token, Òspecified originÓ seed is not really
verifiable, since it is almost impossible to check up on a statement of origin
by the collector/seed broker. So
wild collected seed should be solicited on bids as either 1) Source Identified
or 2) Òorigin not specifiedÓ.
UTAH
ORGANIC STANDARDS
Seth Winterton, Utah Dept of Agric./SLC
(Report
from 2001 Seed School)
Seth Winterton presented information on the new
program in Utah for organic food production. The Utah Organic Certification Program rule became effective
October 17, 2000. Since the
publication of the USDA Federal Rule, the Department is reviewing the State
Rule and may make substantial changes, which include recommendations by
comment, and any adjustment to comply with Federal Rule. It is expected that the Department may
begin to take application for certification March 1, 2001.
Mr. Winterton provided copies of the publication
R68-20, Utah Organic Standards.
Pertinent definitions, answers to frequently asked questions, and fee
structure are summarized here:
Organic food is food that is grown and processed
without the use of synthetic chemicals.
Organic crops are grown without the use of synthetic fertilizers or
pesticides for at least three years prior to harvest. Cover crops, compost and other natural fertilizers are used
for maintaining soil fertility; biological control and natural pesticides are
used for pest control.
Organic livestock production requires that animals are
fed organic feed, have access to pasture or the outside, and prohibits the use
of antibiotics and hormones.
Certified organic means that an independent third
party has verified that all organic standards have been met. Products that are intended to be sold,
labeled or represented as ÒorganicÓ, Ò100% organicÓ, or Òmade with organic
ingredientsÓ, must be from certified organic sources according to Utah state
law. Organically-grown seeds, seedlings, and planting stock (with some
exceptions) are to be used to produce organic crops.
Organic certification is an annual procedure. An application and fee will need to be
submitted to UDAF every year. An
Organic Food Program Inspector that has been federally accredited by the USDA,
and fully qualified to certify for UDAF will inspect organic production areas,
ask questions regarding organic production practices, and request to review
organic production and sales records.
Fee Schedule: An annual registration (license) costs
$100. Hourly fee for inspections
is $23.00 ($34.50 for overtime or holidays or weekends); laboratory fees as
listed by the State Chemist, and travel and per diem charged at current state
rate. In addition, Gross Sales
Fees range from $50 for annual sales of $5001-$10,000 to $2000 for annual sales
over $500,000.
For more information contact Dick Wilson
(801-538-7180) or Seth Winterton (801-538-7141).
LEWIS
FLAXÐNATIVE OR EXOTICÐ
CULTIVAR
OR WEED: IMPLICATIONS
FOR
GERMPLASM DEVELOPMENT
By
Stanley G. Kitchen
USDA
Forest Service, Shrub Sciences
Laboratory,
Provo, UT
In times past, plants growing in wildland settings
saddled with the dual liabilities of no perceived positive attributes (e.g.
livestock forage) and substantial negative attributes (e.g. invasiveness or
poisonous) were quickly labeled as weeds. Management practices were often
modified to do battle with these ÔbadÕ plants. On the other hand, when a
species was deemed to be useful, resources were commonly mobilized to spread
the favored species through wildland plantings. In more recent years, some
segments of society have adopted new criteria for assigning value to plant
species on wildlands. For many, the distance (genetic, ecological, and/or
geographic) between seed origin and proposed planting sites is a principal
consideration. For these, monikers such as native, exotic, site-specific,
introduced, and alien become value labels in addition to descriptions of
origin.
A brief review of the development and use of perennial
flax in western United States wildland plantings provides an example of how
these changing philosophies can impact plant development programs. In 1980,
after several years of evaluation, a selection of perennial flax collected from
the Black Hills of South Dakota and believed to belong to the North American native,
Lewis flax (Linum lewisii), was
released as a interagency cultivar named ÔApparÕ (Howard and Jorgensen 1980).
Appar flax has proven to be widely adapted, a good seed producer, and
relatively easy to establish; a suite of characteristics not found in many
native forbs. Subsequently, it has been used extensively as an ornamental (e.g.
roadside stabilization) and in plantings for wildlife habitat improvement,
erosion control, and wildland restoration.
Just over a decade later, research conducted at the
USDA Forest Service, Shrub Sciences Laboratory demonstrated that Appar belongs,
not to the North American species, Lewis flax, but to its European cousin,
perennial blue flax (L. perenne ;
Pendleton and others 1993). This determination was made from morphological
comparisons of floral anatomy and reciprocal crosses which produced viable seed
from European x Appar crosses but no viable seed from European x American nor
Appar x American crosses. Thus clear differences were identified between the
two species, with Appar belonging to the European species, blue flax. In spite
of these findings, Appar continues to be marketed as a native forb.
Not everyone chose to ignore these findings. Primed by
the possibility that not all of the flax observed in natural settings is native
(and perhaps subconsciously sensitized to name which included the word ÔflaxÕ,
as in toadflax), a few members of the Colorado Weed Management Association
(CWMA) became aware of what they believed to be populations of Òblue flaxÓ
invading natural communities from Appar plantings. Ultimately, Òblue flaxÓ, or L.
perenne var. lewisii, was featured as
an Òinvasive ornamentalÓ in the Fifth Edition of the CWMA handbook,
ÒTroublesome Weeds of the Rocky Mountain WestÓ. After persistent protests by the
Colorado seed industry, the CWMA organized a workshop for weed managers, seed
industry representatives, and plant materials specialists in Durango, CO in
August 2000. At this workshop flax sites were visited and differences and
similarities between the two species were clarified resulting in a
near-unanimous conclusion by those present that neither native Lewis flax nor
introduced blue flax should be considered invasive and that blue flax should be
removed from the CWMA handbook. In addition it was agreed that protocols for
designating weed status would need to be developed to avoid future mistakes of
this kind.
Prior to the discovery of ApparÕs true origin (1988),
the Shrub Sciences Laboratory initiated studies to evaluate variability in
Lewis flax for seedling vigor, drought tolerance, plant longevity, rust
resistance, and seed production using collections from 6 western states and
Appar flax (Kitchen 1995). Several accessions rated equal or superior to Appar
in one or more categories. However, no collection was equal to Appar for 2-year
seed production. One accession, ÔMaple GroveÕ, scored high in all categories
and was selected for further seed production evaluation. Small production plots
of Appar and Maple Grove were established from direct seeding in drill rows.
Initial establishment and vigor of Maple Grove plots exceeded that of Appar
plots. At one site, seed production for Maple Grove flax in the second growing
season was over 550 lbs. per acre (Appar production was 615 lbs per acre).
Long-term yield data for Appar at this site is 720 lbs. per acre. Production
will continue in order to determine long-term yield potential for Maple Grove
flax. Production data support the belief that Maple Grove seed yield may
approach 70-90 percent of that for Appar. Seed increase fields are scheduled
for planting in the Spring of 2002. A Selected Class, Pre-Variety germplasm release is anticipated as seed reserves become adequate.
Thus we see how a correction regarding our
understanding of the origin of Appar flax, a well accepted cultivar, resulted
in a change in how it was valued and in the potential restriction of its use.
Such a restriction will likely amplify any opening in market space, increasing
the probability of the acceptance and use of the native, Maple Grove germplasm.
References
Howard,
C.G.; Jorgensen, K.R. 1980. ÔAppar Lewis flax (Linum lewisii, Pursh) description, adaptation, use, culture,
management, and seed production. U.S. Department of Agriculture, Soil
Conservation Service, Plant Materials Center.
Kitchen,
S.G. 1995. Return of the native: a look at select accessions of North American
Lewis flax; p. 321-326. In: Roundy, B.A.; McArthur, E.D.; Haley, J.S.; Mann,
D.K., comps. Proceedings: wildland shrub and arid land restoration symposium;
1993 October 19-21; Las Vegas, NV. Gen. Tech. Rep. INT-GTR-315. Ogden, UT:
U.S.D.A. Forest Service, Intermountain Research Station.
Pendleton,
R.L.; Kitchen, S.G.; McArthur, E.D. 1993. Origin of the flax cultivar ÔApparÓ
and its taxonomic relationship to North American and European perennial blue
flax. Wildland shrub and arid land restoration symposium. Abstracts. Provo, UT:
Shrub Research Consortium: 23.
VNS
LABELING STATUS
Barley,
Triticale, Wheat
Changes to the Utah State Seed Law which would
disallow VNS labeling for small grains were proposed by the UCIA Board of
Directors in March 1999. The idea
was that this would help in enforcement of PVP laws since VNS labeling Òplus a
whisperÓ identifying the variety would no longer be an option. A motion was made and passed that the
no VNS idea for small grains be forwarded on to the legislative analyst for
proper wording and research that would be required to incorporate it into the
seed law.
Eli Anderson, President of the UCIA and also a state
legislator, was instrumental in shepherding the proposed change through the
legislature in Feburary of 2000.
Intent language connected with the change singled out wheat, triticale,
and barley as the target species for potential rule change to disallow VNS
labeling, and specified that the seed industry, Utah Seed Council, and UCIA
should all have proper input before any rule is implemented.
The actual rule change was proposed by the UDAF in
early 2001, a public learning was held on March 22, final comments were
concluded by April 14, and the effective date was April 15, 2000.
The implications of this law (Utah Seed Act
4-16-4.(1)(a)(i)) and rule (Agriculture and Food, Plant Industry R68-8-7.B)
changes were reiterated at the 2001 Seed School in Provo for those in the seed
industry that hadnÕt been brought up to speed. It is hoped that the requirement that Òbarley, triticale,
common wheat, and durham wheatÓ be sold by variety name only will help prevent
ÒbootleggingÓ of PVP varieties.