Karen McMahon 2, Editor

April 21, 2011

1 Min Read

 

A fungicide from BASF with a new active ingredient should be on the market next year. BASF’s next-generation fungicide called Xemium offers a unique mobility feature that allows it to travel systemically and to completely cover a leaf. As a result, the product offers strong preventive and curative properties against a wide sprectrum of fungi, according to BASF. The company has applied for EPA registration and anticipates receiving it for 2012.

Xemium is derived from the carboxamide class of chemistry, which BASF first used in 1974 as a seed treatment. Xemium is BASF’s third class of fungicidal agents developed from this chemistry.

The structure of the carboxamide molecule has been improved so it provides better disease control, broader spectrum and more properties to help it perform better than previous products, according to Nick Fassler, BASF technical market manager.

Xemium will be offered in two brands for the corn and soybean markets. The first is Priaxor, a fungicide formulated for row-crop cereals, corns and soybeans. In Priaxor, Xemium is paired with the active ingredient found in Headline to provide broad-spectrum control, Fassler says. It works well on diseases like grey leaf spot in corn and soybean rust in beans. The product also has a long-lasting residual disease control.

Systiva is a seed treatment formulation of Xemium for crops, including corn and soybeans. BASF soybean field trials showed a 7% increase in plant emergence when Systiva was added to seed treatments versus the standard seed treatment without Systiva.

Another big plus for Xemium is its ability to work better with other BASF products than any other chemistry seen before, according to Ulf Groeger, BASF Global Project Leader.

For more information, visit BASF’s fungicide Web site at www.agproducts.basf.us.

 

 

 

About the Author(s)

Karen McMahon 2

Editor

Karen McMahon has been editor of Farm Industry News since 2000. She joined the staff in 1998 as senior editor and previously worked on the company’s National Hog Farmer magazine.

Karen grew up on a crop and livestock farm outside of LeMars, IA, and earned her journalism degree from South Dakota State University. After college, she worked on the local newspaper as farm editor and later started writing for various livestock and crop magazines.

She has written extensively about trends and technology related to corn and soybean production, the equipment needed for row-crop farming, and livestock production.   

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