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ASA and Plant Health Care Field Trial Program
Will Evaluate N-Hibit Seed Treatment as SCN Tool
February 13, 2007… St. Louis, Missouri… The
American Soybean Association (ASA), in partnership with Plant Health Care,
Inc. (PHC), today announced the 2007 "N-Hibit™ Partnership"
field trial program that will evaluate N-Hibit Seed Treatment during the
2007 growing season as a tool to lower Soybean Cyst Nematode (SCN)
pressure and improve soybean plant health.
"ASA views this field trial program as an opportunity
for its members to maximize soybean yield and profitability, and reduce
the threat of SCN damage," said ASA Vice President Rob Joslin, a
soybean producer from Sidney, Ohio. "We believe soybean growers will
want to conduct their own on-farm trials to determine results with N-Hibit
on a commercial scale under their own growing conditions and management
systems to help document the performance of this seed treatment."
N-Hibit is a dry material that is not a restricted use
product. It is easy to apply by the seed dealer or in the hopper box, has
an excellent safety profile, and leaves no residuals in the water, soil or
on plants.
"Field research at the University of Illinois at
Urbana has shown that N-Hibit reduces SCN eggs significantly," said
Dr. Ned French, PHC Director of Field Biology and Development. "Other
replicated and commercial research trials have shown N-Hibit increases
root and plant growth and also increases soybean yield about 6.5 percent,
or more than 3 bushels per acre."
Participating growers will be provided a kit that will
include a coupon redeemable at local seed retailers to have enough N-Hibit
Commercial Seed Treatment to treat up to 2,500 pounds of soybean seed.
Also in the kit will be flags to mark the trial location and a notebook
containing detailed instructions, data sheets, and other information. They
will be asked to use 20 to 50 acres for the treated area and monitor an
equivalent number of acres as an untreated control. When yield and other
data are turned in after harvest, participants will be automatically
entered into a drawing for power tools.
"We believe N-Hibit can be a very economical and
helpful tool in reducing SCN egg counts and damage in soybeans, just as
other university research has shown that N-Hibit reduces Root Knot
Nematode and Reniform Nematode eggs among roots by about 50 percent,"
said Dr. French.
The active ingredient in N-Hibit and other Harp-N-Tek™
products is harpin protein, which is produced by disease causing bacteria
that attack plants. Harp-N-Tek products do not contain pathogens, but
cause the plant to respond as though being attacked. Harpin proteins do
not enter the plant. They bind with the plant’s external harpin protein
receptors, which are present on seed, as well as foliage. This turns on
the plant’s natural self defense and growth systems. Then the harpin
proteins harmlessly disintegrate.
For further information on the N-Hibit Partnership
Program, phone PHC at 800-421-9051. Sign-up forms for the N-Hibit
Partnership Program will be available by phone and the PHC web site,
www.N-HibitPartners.com. Enrollment forms also will be available at the
PHC booth Number 217-219 at Commodity Classic. Growers can access
information about the program on the ASA web site www.SoyGrowers.com.
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For more information, contact:
Rob Joslin, ASA Vice President, 937-726-0842, robjoslin@woh.rr.com
Ned French, PHC Director of Field Research & Biology, 501-821-7094,
nfrench@planthealthcare.com
Ron Butler, PHC Public Relations, 573-345-1124, ron@ccnmarketing.com
Bob Callanan, ASA Communications Director, 314-576-1770, bcallanan@soy.org
Access this release at www.SoyGrowers.com
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