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82119_book_art.gxp 1 /16/19 1:10 PM Page 5 <br />__.4)------- <br />NON-AGRICULTURAL USE REQUIREMENTS <br />The requirements in this box apply to uses of this product that are NOT within the scope <br />of the Worker Protection Standard for agricultural pesticides (40 CFR Part 170). The WPS <br />applies when this product is used to produce agricultural plants on farms, forests, or <br />greenhouses. Do not enter or allow others to enter treated areas until sprays have dried. <br />PRODUCT INFORMATION <br />This product may be applied for the control of undesirable plant vegetation, including <br />emerged annual and perennial grass, sedge and broadleaf weeds in a variety of settings. <br />This product is foliar-active with little or no activity in soil. Weeds that emerge after <br />application will not be controlled. Necrosis of leaves and young shoots occur within 2 to 4 <br />days after application under active growing conditions. <br />RESISTANCE MANAGEMENT <br />For resistance management, this product is a Group 10 herbicide. Any weed population may <br />contain or develop plants naturally resistant to this product and other Group 10 herbicides. <br />The resistant biotypes may dominate the weed population if these herbicides are used <br />repeatedly in the same area. Appropriate resistance management strategies should be <br />followed. <br />To delay herbicide resistance take one or more of the following steps: <br />• Rotate the use of this product or other Group 10 herbicides within a growing season <br />sequence or among growing seasons with different herbicide groups that control the same <br />weeds. <br />• Use tank mixtures with herbicides from a different group if such use is permitted; where <br />information on resistance in target weed species is available, use the less resistance -prone <br />partner at a rate that will control the target weed(s) equally as well as the more <br />resistance -prone partner. Consult your local extension service or certified crop advisor if <br />you are unsure as to which active ingredient is currently less prone to resistance. <br />• Adopt an integrated weed -management program for herbicide use that includes scouting <br />and uses historical information related to herbicide use and that considers mechanical <br />control methods, cultural (e.g., timing to favor the turf and not the weeds), biological <br />(weed -competitive varieties) and other management practices. <br />• Scout before and after herbicide application to monitor weed populations for early signs <br />of resistance development. Indicators of possible herbicide resistance include: (1) failure <br />to control a weed species normally controlled by the herbicide at the dose applied, <br />especially if control is achieved on adjacent weeds; (2) a spreading patch of non -controlled <br />plants of a particular weed species; (3) surviving plants mixed with controlled individuals <br />of the same species. If resistance is suspected, prevent weed seed production in the <br />5 <br />