Take Action’s 2025 Herbicide Classification Chart Now Available!

Knowing which herbicide sites of action are in your sprayer tanks each year is essential to managing and preventing herbicide resistance.  

But commercial herbicide offerings tend to change slightly every year, which can complicate farmers’ ability to select the most effective herbicide and herbicide group for the weeds they battle on their farms.

That’s where Take Action (Herbicide-Resistance Management) can help! 

Sponsored by the United Soybean Board, this research network releases an updated Herbicide Classification Chart each fall. The chart, which is created and maintained by Michigan State University weed scientist Dr. Christy Sprague, has two important sections: 

  • A color-coded chart Mode of Action chart, listing every herbicide site of action group and: 
    1. The number of resistant weed species to that site of action in the U.S.
    2. Active ingredients within that site of action
    3. Examples of branded commercial products containing each active ingredient.
  • A Premix Herbicide Product chart, which lists commercially available premix products and:
    1. The active ingredients in each premix
    2. The trade name of each active ingredient
    3. The site-of-action groups for each premix

The chart is a powerful tool for farmers who are facing a growing epidemic of weeds with resistance to one or more herbicide sites of action. The chart can help producers create a herbicide program that incorporates multiple herbicide sites of action within tank mixes and across seasons. 

Thanks to the USB’s sponsorship of Take Action, the Herbicide Classification chart is available for complimentary print orders, up to a certain amount.

Visit the Take Action website resources page to order, or place your order directly here. Looking to stock up for the rapidly approaching winter meeting season? Order soon, to give plenty of time for your charts to arrive!

Order new Take Action Herbicide Classification charts now, to beat the winter meeting crush! (Photo graphic credit: Emily Unglesbee, GROW)

Text and photo graphics by Emily Unglesbee, GROW