| 05/01/06
 A NEW cereal fungicide designed to help UK farmers fight back
              against growing disease resistance problems - by meeting the demand
              for higher doses of triazole fungicide, combined with an anti-resistance
            fungicide partner - is being developed by Syngenta
            Crop Protection. 
			
			New cereal fungicide UK 282 - similar yield and disease control
			  levels to leading standard fungicides in extensive tests.
			   
                |  |  Known by its code name, UKF0282, the development product contains
              two curative triazole fungicides shown to penetrate inside the
              leaf, combined with the anti-resistance partner of Bravo (chlorothalonil),
            which protects against fungal growth on the leaf surface. Extensive testing of the new mixture - particularly against Septoria
              tritici - in over 35 trials around the UK, has shown levels of
              disease control and yields similar to those from leading triazole
              fungicide standards. However because UKF0282 contains active ingredients that are already
              available, there have been none of the huge development costs associated
              with bringing new active ingredients to the market, Syngenta points
              out. Instead, twenty first century know-how has been used in creating
              an efficacious formulation, it adds. "Low cereal prices mean high yields from top disease control
              are crucial with cereal production," says Syngenta cereal
              disease specialist, Matt Pickard, "in order for growers to
              maximise crop margins. "Equally, though, with low grain prices, we know that growers
              are looking for cost-effective disease control solutions. "Trials have shown that programmes containing UKF0282 have
              given Septoria tritici control and yields to match mixtures of
              the triazoles epoxiconazole or prothioconazole with Bravo. In trials,
              UKF0282 has also given similar brown and yellow rust control to
              epoxiconazole with Bravo," he adds. Tested in both wheat and barley, UKF0282 has been developed based
              on the concept of triazole stacking. This is essentially the mixing
              together of different triazoles each with complementary disease
              strengths. "Chlorothalonil completes the armoury, providing
              reliable control of all strains of Septoria tritici," Mr Pickard
              points out. "Similarly, research has shown that the two triazole ingredients
              contained in UKF0282, cyproconazole and propiconazole, penetrate
              and move through a cereal leaf at different speeds. The faster
              moving fungicidal activity from cyproconazole is complemented by
              slower moving activity of propiconazole to give more even leaf
              protection." Syngenta hopes to have the evaluation of UKF0282 completed by
              the Pesticide Safety Directorate in time for the 2006 season. 
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