2026
Evaluating Metribuzin and sulfentrazone rates for crop injury and weed control across North Dakota - year 2
Contributor/Checkoff:
Category:
Sustainable Production
Keywords:
(none assigned)
Lead Principal Investigator:
Joseph Ikley, North Dakota State University
Co-Principal Investigators:
Project Code:
2026_Agronomy_14
Contributing Organization (Checkoff):
Leveraged Funding (Non-Checkoff):
Institution Funded:
Brief Project Summary:
Herbicide-resistant kochia and waterhemp continue to spread and are problematic for
many North Dakota soybean farmers. Effective postemergence herbicide options are
becoming more limited as resistance to glyphosate and dicamba is becoming more frequent
in these weeds. Soil residual herbicides are an important component to management of
weed populations with resistance to multiple herbicide sites of action. Metribuzin and
sulfentrazone are two older soil residual herbicides that can be effective against most
problematic broadleaf weeds. Application rates of metribuzin and sulfentrazone are often
lower than maximum labeled rates due to concerns of crop injury to soybean. Recent
research...
Information And Results
Project Summary

Herbicide-resistant kochia and waterhemp continue to spread and are problematic for
many North Dakota soybean farmers. Effective postemergence herbicide options are
becoming more limited as resistance to glyphosate and dicamba is becoming more frequent
in these weeds. Soil residual herbicides are an important component to management of
weed populations with resistance to multiple herbicide sites of action. Metribuzin and
sulfentrazone are two older soil residual herbicides that can be effective against most
problematic broadleaf weeds. Application rates of metribuzin and sulfentrazone are often
lower than maximum labeled rates due to concerns of crop injury to soybean. Recent
research conducted in Fargo concludes that higher rates of metribuzin (up to 12 oz ai/A; 16
oz/A of a dry 75% formulation) and sulfentrazone (up to 6 oz ai/A; 12 fl oz/A of a 4 lb
formulation) provide greater than 90% control of waterhemp for up to 6 weeks after
planting. Furthermore, no soybean injury was noted across multiple trial years. The rates
used in that research are often 3-4X higher than standard application rates across the state.
That research was conducted on a clay loam with a single soybean cultivar, so the goal of
this research is to evaluate higher rates of these products on different soil types and weed
species across the state for weed control and crop injury.

Project Objectives

-Determine risk of crop injury from metribuzin and sulfentrazone on different soil types
across the NDSU Research Extension Centers
-Determine weed control from multiple rates of metribuzin and sulfentrazone at these same
locations

Project Deliverables

-Trials will be on display at Weed Science and REC Field Days that are open to the public
-Results will be shared at Extension and Scientific meetings

Progress Of Work

Final Project Results

Benefit To Soybean Farmers

The project will evaluate crop safety and herbicide efficacy on waterhemp and kochia at 6
different sites across North Dakota. Crop safety information will be region-specific on
typical soil types near each trial location, which will help generate confidence to use these
products at higher rates. The weed control information with show the benefit of each active
ingredient at 2 rates, and a mixture of both active ingredients to emphasize their role in
season-long control of kochia and waterhemp.

The United Soybean Research Retention policy will display final reports with the project once completed but working files will be purged after three years. And financial information after seven years. All pertinent information is in the final report or if you want more information, please contact the project lead at your state soybean organization or principal investigator listed on the project.