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Harrington Seed Destructor on path to production


Australia
November 11, 2010

The grain industry’s latest weapon in weed control – the Harrington Seed Destructor (HSD) – is nearing commercial reality.

Grain growers in the southern cropping zone should have the opportunity to see first-hand the HSD in action when the unit is evaluated in South Australia, Victoria and New South Wales next year.

The HSD has been developed by Western Australian grower and inventor Ray Harrington, (photo) with assistance from the Australian Herbicide Resistance Initiative (previously the Western Australian Herbicide Resistance Initiative), University of South Australia and the Grains Research and Development Corporation (GRDC).

Towed behind a harvester like a chaff cart, the HSD has been developed around a cage mill crushing unit originally developed for use in the mining industry.

The unit, complete with its own power supply, incorporates chaff and straw delivery systems. During harvest, chaff collected from the top sieves of the harvester is delivered into the cage mill where it is processed sufficiently to destroy any weed seeds present.

Speaking at recent GRDC research Updates in the southern cropping region, Mr Harrington told growers that a third prototype of the HSD has now been designed by the Agricultural Machinery Research and Design team at the University of South Australia, further progressing commercialisation of the machine.

He said four new units were expected to be built within the next year and evaluation would continue to measure the machine’s short-term impact on weed seed destruction as well as its longer-term effects on weed populations and crop production.

Field testing so far has determined that the HSD potentially has a ryegrass seed destruction capacity of up to 95 per cent. Similar effectiveness has also been determined for wild radish, wild oats and brome grass seed present in the chaff fraction during harvest.

Mr Harrington stressed that the HSD was not a “silver bullet in weed management” but was in fact one more string in the bow of overall integrated weed management.

Having switched from mixed farming to broadacre cropping some 14 years ago, Mr Harrington realised herbicide resistance in ryegrass was a serious threat to crop production.

“I decided that if I could manage weed seed set at harvest I would have a chance to combat the weed problem and after looking at all the options and logistics, crushing the seed seemed to be the answer,” Mr Harrington said.

Adapting the cage mill technology used in the mining industry for initial experiments, the first seed destructor prototype was developed and tested on Mr Harrington’s farm in 2007.

Since then, the unit has been progressively modified and a more extensive field testing program has been undertaken by AHRI and Mr Harrington with GRDC support.

Mr Harrington expressed his gratitude to the GRDC for its investment in development of the HSD, on behalf of growers and the Australian Government.

“Without the GRDC’s partnership, this project would never have got off the ground.”

Based at the University of WA, AHRI researcher Dr Michael Walsh has also spoken to growers at GRDC Updates in the southern region to emphasise the importance of avoiding herbicide resistance through targeting weed seed production and the overall need to manage herbicide resistance in annual ryegrass.

Dr Walsh said the frequency and distribution of herbicide resistant weed populations continued to escalate across all Australian dryland grain production regions, coinciding with the adoption of conservation cropping systems heavily reliant on selective herbicidal weed control.

“The negative consequence of herbicide resistance is that highly effective herbicides can no longer be used for the control of a problematic weed population,” Dr Walsh said.

“Therefore the avoidance of herbicide resistance is imperative in the continuation of intensive conservation cropping systems. But the management of herbicide resistant populations in these systems is essential.

“Targeting the seed production of annual ryegrass populations facilitates continuous cropping regardless of the resistance status.”

Dr Walsh said several effective options including chaff carts, windrow burning and baling were now available to growers to target the seed-bearing chaff fraction of harvest residues.

“And the positive results from the HSD testing to date are very encouraging. With the continuing focus on the research and development of this system it is likely that a chaff grinding system will be available in the near future.”



More news from:
    . GRDC (Grains Research & Development Corporation)
    . Australian Herbicide Resistance Initiative (AHRI)


Website: http://www.grdc.com.au

Published: November 11, 2010

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