NovaChem > Industry News > 2022 > Mavrik – the ‘soft’ crop protection packing a punch in beet

Mavrik – the ‘soft’ crop protection packing a punch in beet


Published on 22/07/2022


That’s according to ADAMA New Zealand commercial manager Doug Speers.
 
He is quick to emphasise,
however, that doesn’t mean taking a backwards step inefficacy. A case in point is Mavrik Aquaflow Insecticide (Mavrik), which Adama launched to the beet market in 2021.

 
Mavrik offers effective
control of major beet pests Nysius and cutworm while having low toxicity to beneficial insects foraging in beets or surrounding crops. Crucially, it is also safer for those using it.

 
Doug says in crops such
as beet where the stakes are high, the farming sector has tended to be particularly cautious about adopting new chemistry. Mavrik has proven an exception.

 
Grant Pollock, owner
of South Taranaki’s Finer Spraying Services, who specified Mavrik for 250 ha of beet last season, agrees.

 
“It was a no brainer. One
of my reasons was applicator safety. But it’s also one of the few sprays that will control Nysius and cutworm and leave the friendlies.”

 
Well respected in the in
dustry, Grant began working for Finer Spraying Services in 1986. By 2005 he was a partner in the company and in 2016 bought Jim Finer out.

 
Jim is still actively in
volved and helps out especially through the busy months. Grant says right from the start, he and former business partner Jim decided to take a firm line when it came to protecting staff from the hazards of harsh toxins.

 
“The products might
sometimes cost a little more, but when we explain to clients that they work, why we chose them, and that it’s better for the environment too, we’ve had no resistance. We’re very focussed on staff here, and that includes considering the products they have to handle.”

 
Grant says his region has
seen some ‘phenomenal’ beet crops: “fifty tonne easily, if it’s on good country and it’s well looked after.”

 
Grant’s brother, Mata
mata-based Charlie Pollock, co-owns busy Pollock Spraying Services with wife Vicki. Charlie too chose Mavrik for beet crops.

 
“It was the right thing to
do for our clients and our staff.”
 
Charlie says he’s noticed a
definite trend away from traditional ‘hard’ crop protection products.

 
“People are steering away
from the old-style chemistry for health reasons. And Mavrik, it only kills the target insects – it’s not just about wiping everything out.”

 
Mavrik has as its active
taufluvalinate. Unlike organophosphates (OPs) or other synthetic pyrethroids (SPs), Mavrik offers strong control of major beet pests Nysius and cutworm, while having low toxicity to beneficial insects foraging in beets or other crops nearby.

 
Mavrik affects the nerv
ous system of Nysius and cut-worm after direct contact or ingestion. While these pests are overcome, the impact on beneficial insects, including ground beetles, bees and wasps, lacewings, hoverflies and ladybirds, is minimal.

 
Without effective con
trol, the economic impact of Nysius and cutworm can be substantial. Nysius huttoni (also known as wheat bug) sucks the phloem from the shoots and young stems of emerging beet, leaving them weakened and prone to wind damage. This pest alone can cause crop losses well above 50% in the worst cases.

 
Young cutworm
Agrotis ipsilon aneituma will forage on beet leaves while the larger more destructive caterpillars can chew through seedlings, taking them out at ground level.

 
As with any spray applica
tion, timing is vital. Doug says some farmers, particularly in the Southern regions, had been a little late getting onto the pests last season.

 
“It meant they didn’t get
quite the results you’d expect. An early reaction can make all the difference.”

 
Adama recommends that
Mavrik be applied at the first sign of the two pests’ presence, ensuring good cover-age of plants and surrounding soil. The product is crop safe when applied to beet seed-lings at cotyledon stage in a tank-mixture with Adama beet herbicides and other commonly used pesticides.

 
Mavrik is the latest addi
tion to the company’s powerful, safe, and flexible beet protection toolbox which has grown in response to specialist technical, spray contractor, and farmer feedback.

 
Taking a whole-crop ap
proach, it is a suite of globally sourced and locally tried and tested products. Adama’s beet herbicides complementing Mavrik are based around the use of a robust pre-emergence spray with a follow-up to control any subsequent weeds.

 
Spearheading the pro
gramme is Goltix Gold with its proven efficacy in particularly hard-to-control beet weeds, including fathen and wireweed. Other compatible herbicide products in the beet programme include Ethosat, Torero and Rifle.

 
For more information vis
it www.adama.com





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