โMix and rotate multiple herbicide modes of action each year,โ the decades-old advice goes.
But that wisdom is missing a key word โ multiple effective herbicide modes of action. A lot of things can torpedo a herbicide program that looks effective on paper, from herbicide resistance lurking in your region to lowered rates of certain ingredients in tank mixes.

The new GROW Check My Herbicide Plan tool aims to help farmers get a quick overview of how many active ingredients in their herbicide program are actually effective modes of action against their target weeds.
โScientists have long recognized that the process of determining herbicide effectiveness is cumbersome, difficult, and time consuming – which made it the perfect opportunity for a digital solution,โ explains tool developer, Dr. Michael Flessner, of Virginia Tech.
Flessner co-developed the tool with Dr. Muthu Bagavathiannan (TAMU), with input from the Weed Science Society of America (WSSA) and Herbicide Resistance Action Committee (HRAC), and initial development by Quacito LLC.
Why Do I Need This?ย
Herbicide branding and labeling can be a confusing tangle of marketing and science.
Products with identical ingredients often sport different brand names. Active ingredients may sound different but share group numbers โ and sometimes a chemical doesnโt actually target all the weeds you think it does. Also, rates of an active ingredient in a premix can be too low to be effective against certain weeds.
Finally, herbicide-resistant weed populations in your region can sneakily undercut the number of effective active ingredients in your tank mix.
The Check My Herbicide Tool can help farmers and crop advisors untangle some of these webs, and give you a clear starting point to build stronger herbicide programs in your burndown, preemergence and postemergence applications.
How the Tool Works
You can find the Check My Herbicide Plan under GROWโs Tool Menu on the top menu bar. The tool will guide the user through the following steps:
- Enter your state and county
- Enter your crop (only three for now โ cotton, corn or soybeans)
- Enter up to three target weeds
- Enter any known herbicide resistance in those weeds. Not sure? The tool will suggest some, based on expert-reported cases in your region.
- Enter your herbicides for up to three application timings: Burndown, Preemergence and Postemergence. Layby is an additional timing option for cotton.
The tool will then generate a results page, which tells you how many effective modes of action you are using in each application pass.

This video walks you through these steps โ see it here:
Note that the results page uses color coding to show which active ingredients are effective (green), not fully effective (orange) or likely ineffective (red) against the target weeds you selected. You can hover over the question mark in each box to learn the exact reason that herbicide active ingredient was marked orange or red.ย
A legend under the results reading also offers an explanation of why a herbicide product might be marked ineffective.

Follow Up With Your Regional Expert
The Check My Herbicide Plan is meant to be a starting place, not a final step, in evaluating your herbicide plan.
โOur goal is to meet farmers where they are, by providing something that can be used while planning over the winter or at the retail counter,โ Flessner explains.
Be sure to check in with your local weed management expert, such an Extension weed specialist, for help building effective herbicide plans for your individual fields and target weeds.
โThis tool was built to address the most troublesome weeds, but donโt forget that other weeds need to be controlled too,โ Flessner adds. โDonโt automatically remove a mode of action from your herbicide program because it isnโt effective on one weed. That herbicide might be critical for controlling a different weed in your field.โ
The Check My Herbicide Plan tool is under active development, as herbicide products change, and our knowledge of herbicide resistance cases develops. We welcome comments, concerns, corrections or any other feedback on the new tool under the Contact Us tab.
If the tool uncovers some weaknesses in your program, check out GROWโs Herbicide Management page, the Basics of Herbicide Resistance page and How to Manage Herbicide Resistance with IWM page for more guidance.
Need help sorting through the different families of herbicide modes of action? Use Take Actionโs Herbicide Classification Chart and Herbicide Look-Up Tool.
For more help on managing individual weed species, see the GROW Weed Library and the Take Action Factsheet page.
Article by Emily Unglesbee, GROW; Header photo by Claudio Rubione, GROW; feature photo by the United Soybean Board.


























































































