The Challenges of Managing Non-Target-Site Herbicide Resistance

Farmers have a lot of experience identifying, mixing and rotating herbicide sites of action to avoid herbicide resistance. 

But an increasingly common type of resistance, called non-target-site resistance (NTSR), has undermined this management strategy, because it can confer resistance to more than one herbicide group. 

Scientists are racing to catch up to this growing and confounding challenge, and the future may hold solutions, explains University of Illinois weed scientist Dr. Patrick Tranel. Listen in below! 

Today’s Problem

When a weed evolves to dodge a herbicide by rapidly metabolizing, storing or detoxifying it, that’s known as non-target-site resistance (sometimes known as the most common of these, “metabolic resistance”). 

It has thrown the farming and science community for a loop, since rotating and even tank-mixing herbicide sites of action can’t easily defeat these weeds, which may be resistant to a range of herbicide groups, rather than just one, as occurs in target-site resistance. (Need a refresher on these mechanisms of resistance? Check out this GROW video with Dr. Tranel). 

For these non-target-site resistant weeds, farming tools like the color-coded Take Action Herbicide Classification chart and herbicide Group Numbers listed on herbicide labels are of limited utility, Tranel notes. 

Tomorrow’s Solution

Future tools might include charts that explain which enzyme in a weed can defeat which herbicides through metabolic resistance. (Chart credit: Claudio Rubione, GROW)

But don’t despair! Already, scientists like Tranel are working to crack open the genetic codes of weeds that are displaying non-target-site resistance mechanisms. They are hoping to learn, for example, if a certain enzyme is at work metabolizing herbicides, and which herbicide groups it can rapidly digest. 

“If we knew which enzyme is metabolizing Herbicide A, and we also knew that enzyme also metabolized Herbicides B, C and D, then we could create a color-coded chart based on which herbicides are metabolized by the same enzyme,” Tranel explains. 

Charts like these could help farmers as they decide which herbicides to tank mix or rotate to avoid both target-site and non-target-site resistant weeds. 

“This is obviously not happening today or tomorrow, but in the future, we may have these additional tools,” Tranel says. 

See more GROW videos from Tranel on the different mechanisms of herbicide resistance and how that impacts the effectiveness of tank-mixing and rotating herbicide sites of action. 


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