Average of. 17% yield increase from. Clearfield® hybrids. 500. 3000. 2500. 2000
...... Canola which may contain canola with Non GM or approved GM events.
Canola Field Guide 2012-13
Canola
Technology that yields®. T H E
B E S T
C R O P S
www.pioneer.com
S T A R T
W I T H
T H E
B E S T
S E E D S
Stacks of benefits. Stacks of yield. Proven performance High grain and oil yields Range of maturities to suit every growing condition Exceptional early season vigour Weed control options of ® ® Roundup Ready or Clearfield Consistent supply of top quality seed
Pioneer brings you more than canola seed
There are stacks of reasons Y you should choose Pioneer® brand Y series canola hybrids. With so many benefits, it’s easy to see why growing Y series canola from Pioneer stacks up in more ways than one. What’s more, with a consistent supply of seed, you can be sure we’ve got the hybrid you want, when you want it.
For further information: call 1800 CANOLA or visit www.pioneer.com 2 can only be commercially grown in Australian states that allow its production. Canola varieties and hybrids containing the Roundup Ready® gene of herbicide tolerance ®, TM, SM : Trademarks and service marks of Pioneer Hi-Bred International, Inc. Clearfield® is a registered trademark of BASF. Roundup Ready® is a registered trademark used under licence from Monsanto Company.
Proven leadership with our unique Y series canola hybrids Reliable supplies of high quality seed World class technologies and traits deliver greater sustainability and profitability Club Pioneer that rewards our loyal customers The highest standards in quality assurance and seed treatment to protect your investment Exclusive, large scale canola trials provide the proving ground for performance on-farm – Product Advancement Trials (PAT) and the Clearfield® Challenge Industry benchmark in technical support and product knowledge through local and global agronomy networks Long Look philosophy is integral to how we do business 3
Y series hybrids
Y series hybrids
A canola revolution
NEW in 2012
The answer to all your canola questions:
YES
to accelerated yield gains over traditional open-pollinated varieties
YES
the seedling vigour is a step up from anything else on the market
YES
we offer herbicide tolerance options of Clearfield® and Roundup Ready®
YES
we have a greater choice of maturity to suit all conditions
YES
we have proven the reliability of our seed supply with the highest quality hybrid seed
YES
they are genetically different, genetically better, so order the new Y Series canola hybrids early for planting next season
43Y85
45Y22
The next generation (2013)
45Y86
43Y23
series hybrids. A canola revolution. 4
5
Technology that yields®
Technology that yields®
You NOW have greater choice of alternative herbicide tolerant options to manage weeds in your canola rotations.
The results are in
Effective weed control
Clearfield® and Roundup Ready® herbicide systems are both ideally suited to farming canola under minimum tillage. The benefits don’t stop at herbicide cost savings in the canola crop but carry over to reducing weed populations in crops following. By allowing growers to rotate their chemistry ensures that all herbicide options are effective when they need them to manage resistance issues and hard-to-kill weed species. The bottom line is yield potential and canola quality is protected.
Reap the benefits of early sowing
The ability to sow on time or to dry sow is critical as planting windows can close quickly. Early planting of canola results in better water use efficiency, higher yields and reduced risks of low oil content in canola.
Pioneer is as committed to YOUR success as you are. That’s why we are the leaders introducing alternative herbicide tolerant technologies to replace traditional triazine tolerant (TT) canola.
Proven Y series hybrids to boost your profits Simple and reliable weed control options Exceptional early vigour to boost crop establishment Higher confidence to sow your crop early ahead of weed emergence Greater flexibility to add canola in your crop rotations Cleaner canola fields without compromising oil yield A higher degree of safety for the environment and for you
Proven performance
Australian field trials1 and grower experience have quantified the yield penalty of triazine tolerant (TT) canola cultivars over the past decade. The advantage of Clearfield® and Roundup Ready® canola is real when it comes to more productivity and profit. On average, TT canola cultivars are 17.2% less in yield and over $200 per hectare less in gross income compared to Clearfield® and Roundup Ready® canola.
Reduced environmental impact
Australian environmental analysis2 have shown that canola produced using Clearfield® or Roundup Ready® technology systems was less than half the estimated environmental impact of triazine tolerant canola. These alternative systems offer sustainable weed control and cleaner waterways in our rural environment.
References: 1. Robertson et al (2002) “Growth and yield differences between triazine-tolerant and non-triazine-tolerant cultivars of canola Aust. J. Agric Res, 53, 645-651 2. Tozer DP and Fisher DJ (2009) “Evaluation of the environmental and economic impact of Roundup Ready
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Comparison of canola herbicide systems
What’s in a name?
NVT results at 20 locations over two years
Pioneer® brand canola is named using a standard system world wide to provide important information that characterise maturity, varieties or hybrids, and herbicide tolerance traits. Here is how the system works.
Canola herbicide systems, 2009-10 250 $232.80
240
1200
230
1100
220
1000
210 $1,316.70
800
$1,290.00
$206.10 900
$1,083.90
Income ($/ha)
1300
Average TT
Average RR
Average CL
200 190
Income advantage ($/ha)
1400
$ income/ha Extra income ($/ha) compared to TT canola
* All NVT locations in 2009-10 where all canola systems were in same trials. All Victorian HT trials abandoned in 2010. Averages for each herbicide system calculated over all commercial varieties in NVT HT trials. In 2009-10, there were 18 TT varieties, 9 RR varieties and 7 CL varieties. In 2010, averages used 14 TT varieties, 12 RR varieties and 6 CL varieties. # Excludes locations where CV>15.0. South Australia does not permit Roundup Ready® in NVT trials and is not included in national averages. New field design implemented from 2011 does not allow comparison of canola systems from 2011 NVT trials.
Grower experience with weed control, 2008-09
Indicates maturity 3 = early 4 = early-mid 5 = mid-early 6 = mid
Indicates the herbicide trait 2 = Roundup Ready® 7/8 = Clearfield®
Indicates whether hybrid or open pollinated C = open-pollinated canola Y = Y series hybrid canola
80 70
Number of responses
4 3 C 8 0 (CL) 4 5 Y 2 2 (RR)
60 50 40 30 20 10
Excellent
Good
Average
® Roundup Ready
® Clearfield
Poor Triazine Tolerant
*Grower responses from Monsanto survey conducted in 2008 and 2009. Summary of 137 comparisons made across different paddocks growing each canola system on individual farms.
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A quick guide to choosing canola
Variety comparison
Choosing the right canola for the right paddock
Clearfield®
Step 1 Match the herbicide system to manage weeds in each paddock rotation.
Agronomic description
NEW 43Y85 (CL)
44Y84 (CL)
45Y82 (CL)
NEW 45Y86 (CL)
43C80 (CL)
44C79 (CL)
Variety type
Y series hybrid
Y series hybrid
Y series hybrid
Y series hybrid
Openpollinated
Openpollinated
Very high for maturity
Very high
High
Very high
High for maturity
High
Grain oil content
High
Very high
High
Very high
High
Very high
Grain test weight+
Excellent
Very good
Excellent
Very good
Excellent
Good
Early
Early-mid
Mid-early
Mid
Early
Early-mid
Early vigour
Excellent
Excellent
Excellent
Excellent
Very good
Excellent
Blackleg resistance#
MR*
MR
MR
MR*
MS*
MR-MS
A
Not screened
A**
B**
Not screened
C**
Plant height
Mediumshort
Tall
Medium
Mediumtall
Medium
Medium
Standability
Excellent
Very good
Excellent
Excellent
Very good
Good
Yield potential
Step 2 Assess the best maturity to fit seasonal conditions in your region without compromising crop yield or oil bonus.
Step 3 Ensure variety performance has been tested in your growing zone over a minimum of two years and proven in broadacre scale trials.
Step 4
Maturity
Seedling Rlm group (blackleg)
Quantify the risk of key diseases paddock by paddock and then determine the required changes to management practices in combination with a consideration of blackleg rating of the top two varieties chosen from above criteria.
# Official 2012 resistance rating with Betta Strike seed protection (Canola Association of Australia) + Minimum canola trading standard 62 kg/hl (Australian Oilseeds Federation). Rejectable under this limit. * Provisional 2012 blackleg resistance rating (untreated seed) ** Blackleg resistance group (provisional)
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Variety comparison
The proving ground
Roundup Ready®
Pioneer® PAT program
Agronomic description
NEW 43Y23 (RR)
45Y21 (RR)
NEW 45Y22 (RR)
46Y20 (RR)
Variety type
Y series hybrid
Y series hybrid
Y series hybrid
Y series hybrid
Very high for maturity
High - very high
Very high
High
High
High - very high
High
Very high
Excellent
Excellent
Excellent
Excellent
Early
Mid-early
Mid
Mid
Early vigour
Excellent
Excellent
Exceptional
Excellent
Blackleg resistance#
MR*
MR
MR
MR
F
B**
C**
AB
Plant height
Medium-short
Tall
Medium-tall
Medium-tall
Standability
Excellent
Very good
Excellent
Very good
Yield potential Grain oil content Grain test weight Maturity
Seedling Rlm group (blackleg)
+
The Pioneer Product Advancement trial (PAT) program is Pioneer’s exclusive canola testing system. PAT is a key part of our aim to offer canola growers the right product for the right paddock. PAT compares the latest experimental products advanced from Pioneer’s small-plot replicated research trials with commercial Pioneer and competitor benchmarks.
What does it mean when we say Pioneer canola is ‘PAT proven’? PAT helps farmers the opportunity to evaluate new seed products through broadacre scale trials on your own farms. The PAT program allows commercial testing of new products using local management preferences. PAT cooperators use own equipment to harvest trials and weigh yields of each variety entry because your own experience is real. PAT tests new seed products for a minimum of two years over a wide range of key environments because yield decisions based on one trial can be misleading. PAT is designed to measure consistency and adaptation of new seed products covering every major growing zone. PAT proven means results in your paddock to ensure informed decisions are made before Pioneer commercially releases a new product.
PAT proven No other canola company offers the peace of mind of knowing it is PAT proven.
# Official 2012 resistance rating with Betta Strike seed protection (Canola Association of Australia) + Minimum canola trading standard 62 kg/hl (Australian Oilseeds Federation). Rejectable under this limit. * Provisional 2012 blackleg resistance rating (untreated seed) ** Blackleg resistance group (provisional)
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Clearfield® Canola Challenge
Clearfield® Canola Challenge
Because experience in your paddock is best If you’re like most growers, you’re sceptical of product claims and results from small-plot trials. And rightly so. The Clearfield® Challenge offered exclusively by BASF and Pioneer enables canola growers to trial Pioneer® brand seed products and the BASF Clearfield® production system on your own property and assess comparative performance against TT canola. Now in its fourth year, the Clearfield Challenge have shown the effectiveness of Intervix herbicide for broad spectrum weed control and the extra profits of this alternative system side-by-side and head-to-head in the same paddock. From multiple grower trial results and personal grower experience, the economic advantage is demonstrated. Of course you trust your own results! ®
Three year summary 3500 Clearfield® Triazine tolerant 3000
Linear (Clearfield®)
®
Linear (Triazine tolerant)
2500
Canola results – Three year summary 2000
Yield (t/ha)
Oil (%)
Gross margin ($/ha)
Clearfield®
1.99
40.3
539
Triazine-tolerant
1.74
39.5
461
Clearfield®
2.27
42.7
943
Triazine-tolerant
1.64
41.9
606
Clearfield®
1.91
44.6
983
Triazine-tolerant
1.75
44.2
906
Clearfield®
2.07
43.0
876
Triazine-tolerant
1.71
42.4
700
Difference
0.36
0.60
176
2009 (7 growers) 1500
2010 (13 growers) 1000
2011 (14 growers) 500 500
1000
1500
2000
2500
3000
Three year average
For further information visit the BASF or Pioneer websites.
14
Average o 17% yieldf increase fro Clearfield ®m hybrids
Yield (kg/ha)
Yield (oil %)
Clearfield®
2066
43.0
Triazine tolerant
1705
42.4
% WIN
88
67
% T-Test
100
91
# Trials
34
33
equals 17% yield advantage or $180 extra income at $500 per tonne
15
This regression chart plots the results of all the side-by-side trials in the Clearfield® Canola Challenge over the past three years. It shows that there is a very high probability (greater than 95%) that Clearfield® canola will out-yield triazine-tolerant canola in all yield environments – from low through to high yielding – by an average of 17%.
Strength in numbers.
Clearfield®: early choices Varieties 43C80 (CL)
43C80 43C80
45Y82
43Y85
“The quickest Clearfield variety, larger seed ideally suited to minimum tillage systems. Adds flexibility to control weeds in rotations without compromising yield in short-season growing districts. ”
44C79 (CL)
44C79
“Proven in the paddock showing wide adaptation. Excellent early vigour and high oil content for maturity.”
45Y86
44Y84
Y series hybrids 43Y85 (CL)
43Y85
No one has a stronger Clearfield® range than Pioneer. Pioneer’s range of canola with the Clearfield® trait of herbicide tolerance covers every growing situation and maturity. We have the only early season varieties, a new early maturing hybrid and proven mid-season hybrids.
“The earliest canola hybrid with Clearfield® technology released in 2011. Very high yield potential for maturity. Large grain size, shorter plant height and excellent shatter tolerance combine for ease of management. Unique combination of sylvestris and adult plant blackleg resistance in its class for disease protection you can rely on.”
44Y84 (CL)
44Y84
“The first early Clearfield hybrid, widely adapted across most canola growing zones. The industry benchmark for yield in its class and market leading oil content adds economic bonus. Hybrid vigour ensures quicker canopy closure that enhances crop competition compared to TT canola.”
All have good blackleg resistance and standability and all are high yielding. Each one is backed by our local product advancement trial (PAT) program giving you real data from leading growers so you can be confident they will perform on your farm. So whether you want Clearfield® canola with a 3,4,5 or 6 maturity, a variety or a hybrid, you can count on Pioneer because we’ve got the strength in numbers. Choose from the Pioneer Clearfield® canola range this year and you’ll know you’re putting the right product in the right paddock.
NB: *All commercial Pioneer® brand canola varieties with Clearfield® technology tested for tolerance to designated SU herbicide soil residues (Ally®1).
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Clearfield®: early choices
Clearfield®: early choices
What growers are saying
The results are in
Pioneer PAT and GRDC NVT trials, 2 years (combined 2010–11, 30 locs) 3500
43Y85 (CL) 3000
43C80 (CL) Linear (43Y85 CL)
Yield kg/ha
2500
Linear (43C80 CL) Trial average
2000
Yield (kg/ha)
1500
1000
500
500
1000
1500
2000
1899
43C80 (CL)
1735
% WIN
80
% T-Test
100
# Trials
30
equals2500 8.6% yield advantage3000 or $90 extra income at $500 per tonne
Trial average yield kg/ha
Clearfield comparison GRDC NVT 2011 Average of ALL trials, early (12 locs) mid (35 locs) $1,269
2.4
$1,400
$1,330
$1,300
$1,227
2.3
$1,235
2.2
$1,100
$1,133
2.1 2.0
$1,200
$1,000 $998
$900
2.203
$600
1.6
2.372
$700
1.7 2.280
$800
1.8 2.033
1.9
44C79 (CL)
44Y84 (CL)
Hyola 474CL
45Y82 (CL)
44Y84 (CL)
Hyola 474CL
Mid Clearfield 19
$500
Gross income ($/ha)
2.5
Early Clearfield 18
43Y85 (CL)
2.204
A quicker maturing hybrid 44Y84 (CL) proved a good fit on the property of Geoff and Paul Bammann at Cleve on the Eyre Peninsula. Paul Bammann said the crop’s early vigour was “sensational”. The Bammanns chose the crop option based on yield with chemical residues from previous crops taken into consideration. “The Clearfields seem to be consistently outyielding the triazines,” Paul said. Clearfield canola has been grown on the property since 2001 and has provided a good option for both yield and weed control. Yields in the better country reached 2 t/ha with yields of 1.4 t/ha in areas of lower fertility.
Comparison of NEW Pioneer 43Y85 (CL)
1.784
Canola produced excellent yields under late plant conditions on the property of Darren Morrell, at Meckering, east of Northam in Western Australia. Mr Morrell said Pioneer® hybrid 44Y84 (CL) and Pioneer® variety 44C79 (CL) were sown dry in mid-May. He said the Clearfield canola produced yields well above the long-term farm averages. Two paddocks of 44Y84 (CL) produced average yields of 2.4 and 2.1 t/ha and the 44C79 (CL) averaged 2 t/ha. The long-term average for canola on the property is between 1.2 and 1.3 t/ha.
Y series hybrids
Average yield (t/ha)
Canola has become a more viable option in the past two seasons on the property of Andrew Parsons, on his property in the Mallee region, just outside Swan Hill in Victoria. Mr Parsons included both hybrids and open pollinated options on the farm. 44Y84 (CL) was the main hybrid planted with 44C79 (CL) and Pioneer® variety 43C80 (CL) also sown in different paddocks. The canola crop was planted at the end of April. A trial was conducted on the property which pitted 44C79 (CL) against 44Y84 (CL) and the new Pioneer® hybrid 43Y85 (CL). 43Y85 (CL) was the highest yielding canola in the trial at 2 t/ha, compared to 44Y84 (CL) at 1.84 t/ha and 44C79 (CL) at 1.7 t/ha.
Clearfield®: mid choices
Clearfield®: mid choices
Y series hybrids
What growers are saying
45Y82 (CL)
45Y82
Proven consistent performance across a wide range of seasonal conditions. Shorter plant height and excellent standability sets benchmark for ease of management in mid hybrid class. Larger seed and superior early vigour and yield for maturity compared to Hyola 474CL.
Pioneer brings you the next generation of Y series hybrids NEW 45Y86 (CL)
45Y86
Next generation Y series hybrid to be released in 2013 sets new benchmark for herbicide tolerant canola. Extensive testing in the field over four growing seasons has demonstrated wide adaptation and superior performance compared to Hyola 575CL. Exceptional hybrid vigour combined with very high yield potential ideally suited for dualpurpose (graze and grain) option in full-season environments. Recommended replacement for industry benchmark 46Y83.
What growers are saying Canola used as a tool to control weeds has produced excellent yields for Jamie Roebuck, at Arcadia, in the Goulburn Valley of Victoria. Mr Roebuck said the property has been set up for cattle but last season they did not have enough stock to graze the paddocks if it was all planted to pasture. On top of that there were issues with weeds, and so a decision was made to put 80 ha into canola. Pioneer® hybrid 45Y82 (CL) was chosen and planted at a rate of 2.5 kg/ha in mid-April. At harvest some parts of the better paddock were recording yields of 4.2 t/ha and the area averaged 3.5 t/ha. The poorer country, which had issues with being lasered, poor germination and mice, still responded well with an average yield of 2.5 t/ha.
20
Ray Lamond at Blyth in the mid-north planted 45Y82 (CL) as part of the Clearfield Challenge which compares Clearfield and triazine-tolerant herbicide-tolerant canola types. Mr Lamond planted his 45Y82 at a much reduced rate of 2.2kg/ ha (compared with 4.2kg/ha of the TT) on the advice of his agronomist. Initial worries about reducing the seed rate were forgotten as the crop established well and displayed impressive early vigour. “This (45Y82 (CL)) gets up and goes,” Mr Lamond said. The Clearfield hybrid flowered earlier than the triazine and also finished flowering first. The crop showed a good depth of pod across the paddock and yielded
A crop of Clearfield canola produced the best ever yields on the property of Brian McIntosh, at Colbinabbin, in central Victoria last season. Mr McIntosh said he grew 72 ha of Pioneer® hybrid 45Y82 (CL) canola giving an average yield of 3.23 t/ha with an average oil percentage of 43.21 percent. Clearfield® canola has been grown on the property since it was first released and has impressed with good yields in a range of seasonal conditions. Mr McIntosh said the country was bad for radish and turnip weeds and he used the herbicide Intervix as a post-emergent option to control the weeds. Resistant ryegrass has also been an issue in that particular paddock in recent years and it was rotated through a crop of peas before the canola was planted early in the season.
A crop of canola produced an average yield of 2.5 t/ha in a good result for Mark Minehan, of Bumbaldry, east of Cowra, New South Wales. Mr Minehan planted 56 ha of the crop in April of 2011. Pioneer® hybrid 46Y83 (CL) was chosen for the plant with the local agronomist recommending the canola type because it provided greater option for weed control. Mr Minehan said weeds on the property included Paterson’s curse although there were also issues with barley grass in a paddock that had previously been sown down to pasture. He said the herbicide options used on the canola produced a very good result, with the paddocks remaining very clean throughout the season. 21
Clearfield®: mid choices The results are in Y series hybrids Pioneer research
LONG TERM COMPARISON 36 locs over 5 years (2007–11) 2400
46.0 45.6
44.0
1800
43.0
1600
42.0
1400
41.0
1200
40.0
2098
2000
NEW 45Y86 (CL)
46Y83 (CL)
Oil content (%)
45.0
44.7
2218
Average yield (t/ha)
2200
It’s time to reshape your landscape.
Mid Clearfield GRDC NVT 2011 Average of all locations (35 locs) $1,362 $1,298
2400
$1,300 $1,250 $1,200
2350
2346
2322
$1,150 2300
NEW 45Y86 (CL)
46Y83 (CL)
Hyola 575CL
#NVT trials in 2011 (average across ALL locations). N.S.W. (12 locs), Victoria (8 locs), S.A. (7 locs), Western Australia (8 locs). Gross income based on price of $550 per tonne.
22
$1,100
Gross Income ($/ha)
$1,350
$1,316
2450
NEW
$1,400
2427
Average Yield (kg/ha)
2500
The new generation of Pioneer® brand Y series Roundup Ready® hybrids redefine top-end yields and give you simple and effective weed control.
43Y23
45Y22
46Y20
For more information call 1800 CANOLA or visit www.pioneer.com 23 can only be commercially grown in Australian states that allow its production. Canola varieties and hybrids containing the Roundup Ready® gene of herbicide tolerance ®, TM, SM : Trademarks and service marks of Pioneer Hi-Bred International, Inc. Roundup Ready® is a registered trademark used under licence from Monsanto Company. The DuPont Oval Logo is a registered trademark of DuPont.
Roundup Ready®
Roundup Ready®
Pioneer brings you the next generation of Y series hybrids
What growers are saying
The early choice NEW 43Y23 (RR)
43Y23
“The earliest Y series hybrid with Roundup Ready® technology to be released in 2013. Added benefits only Y series hybrids can deliver that combine accelerated yield gains with ease of management for growers in low to medium growing zones. New source of blackleg resistance allows greater flexibility to manage blackleg in canola rotations. Wide adaptation to suit all major canola growing zones.”
Mid choices 45Y22 (RR)
45Y22
“Next generation Y series hybrid released in 2011, combines outstanding standability and redefines top-end yield potential. PAT proven. Proven advantages of exceptional early vigour and responds well with good management. A unique Roundup Ready® hybrid with delayed flowering habit that better suits early planting and helps spread seasonal risk. Extends the choice of weed control tools around environmentally sensitive waterways in high rainfall growing zones.” Recommended replacement for 45Y21.
46Y20 (RR)
46Y20
“The first Y series hybrid with Roundup Ready technology. Proven industry benchmark for excellent early vigour and higher oil content in the herbicide tolerant class. Simply reliable over a wide range of seasonal conditions.”
A season of late planting and heavy rain at harvest still produced high canola yields for Don Howard, of ‘Benbern’ Manilla, north of Tamworth in New South Wales. It was the second year canola had been grown on the property and Mr Howard decided to try a Roundup Ready canola hybrid for the 2011 plant. Sixty ha of Pioneer hybrid 45Y22 (RR) was dry-sown in mid-May and came up on rain early the following month. Mr Howard said there was very little rain received in the first two months but the crop hung on well and responded to good rainfall in September. Just as the moisture level of the canola grain was ready for stripping, the canola received a number of rainfall events totalling 11 inches which delayed harvest until mid-December. Mr Howard had decided to direct-head the crop and was able to harvest it when the paddock finally dried out after the rainfall. In spite of the poor finish to the season, the 45Y22 (RR) still produced an average yield of 3 t/ha.
Roundup Ready canola has proved a great success on the property of Rohan Marold (pictured with Trevor Dhue) of Coomalbidgup, west of Esperance, in southern Western Australia. Last year he grew 600 ha of Roundup Ready canola made up of a number of different hybrids and varieties including the new Pioneer® hybrid 45Y22 (RR) which performed particularly well. Overall the Roundup Ready canola produced an average yield of 2.3 t/ha which was the best result on the property. He said herbicide resistance was becoming more of a problem however with Roundup he was able to control ryegrass which is resistant to other herbicide groups. Ryegrass and radish are the major weed issues on the property and Roundup has proved to be successful in controlling both.
NB: Cultivation and growing of Roundup Ready® canola is permitted only in the states of Queensland, New South Wales, Victoria and Western Australia.
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Roundup Ready®: early choices
Roundup Ready®: mid choices
The results are in
The results are in
New Y series hybrids
Y series hybrids
Comparison of NEW Pioneer 43Y23 (RR)
Long term comparison
12 locations, 2011 across Australia – NSW (5), Vic (4), WA (3)
GRDC NVT 2009–11 (average 3 years, 53 locations)
3000
$1,450
2350
$1,350
2300
$1,289
$1,300
$1,150 $1,106
$1,050
$1,060
$950
$1,240 2200 $1,220 2150 $1,209
$1,200
$1,185
$1,184
2269.8
2010.2
1926.8
2100
2346.6
43Y23 (RR)
Hyola 404RR
45Y21 (RR)
Hyola 502RR
GT Scorpion
$1,180 2116
2050
2337
$850 2154
1000
$1,260
2250
2187
1500
$1,280
Gross Income ($/ha)
$1,250
2000
Average Yield (kg/ha)
$1,248
Gross Income ($/ha)
$1,291
2500
2560.4
Average Yield (kg/ha)
$1,408
GT Mustang
GT Cougar
45Y22 (RR)
46Y20 (RR)
$1,160
Pioneer research: 8.0, experiment mean yield 2.281 t/ha LSD (P