Tank Mixing or Herbicide Rotation: Which Strategy is Best?

A new body of research suggests that tank mixing different herbicide sites of action is more effective at delaying herbicide resistance than simply rotating herbicide sites of action each year. 

Even more importantly, that conclusion appears to be true for both target-site and non-target-site resistance mechanisms. (Confused about what those are? Here’s a refresher). 

Learn why this tank-mixing is such a valuable resistance prevention tool, and what this means for farmers’ weed control strategies moving forward, in this video of Dr. Patrick Tranel, from the University of Illinois. 

Trade-offs and Other Considerations

To refresh, in target-site resistance, plants alter the binding site for a herbicide, thus escaping that herbicide and any other herbicide that shares that site of action. But in non-target-site resistance, plants learn to dodge herbicides by rapidly metabolizing, storing or detoxifying the herbicide, a tactic which can be deployed against many different herbicide groups. That makes non-target-site resistance (often called “metabolic resistance”) a much tougher phenomenon to manage, as this GROW video from Tranel explains. 

Prolific seed producing weeds like Palmer amaranth must be managed by IWM moving forward. Photo credit: Ben Beale, UMD Extension.

Because tank-mixing herbicide sites of action can select for weeds that are dodging all chemical control, and not just specific herbicide groups, the practice can actually select for non-target-site resistance, Tranel notes. But it still slows down the development of herbicide resistance overall, which makes it a worthwhile practice. 

And keep in mind that not all weeds are created equal; some (such as Italian ryegrass) produce a smaller amount of seed compared to super-seeders like Palmer amaranth and waterhemp. 

For weeds that are lower on the seed production side, research models suggest tank-mixing herbicide sites of action could almost indefinitely prevent herbicide resistance from emerging, Tranel explains. 

But for prolific seed producers like Palmer amaranth, tank-mixing – while still superior to herbicide rotation or no rotation –  only delayed resistance for a little bit. That’s a clear lesson on the limitations of chemical-only weed control, Tranel warns. Integrated weed management is the only way forward for weeds like these, he explains. 

“Use other non-chemical strategies to try to keep that population in check,”  he recommends. Once you’ve reduced populations and seed production with IWM tactics, adding diverse herbicide tank mixes to your weed control program will be much more effective for long-term resistance prevention. 


Video and header photo by Claudio Rubione, GROW; narration by Patrick Tranel, University of Illinois; text by Emily Unglesbee, GROW.