Cotton

New generation Bollgard III to blitz cotton plantings

Neil Lyon September 1, 2016

Cotton

TWO DECADES after the first genetically-modified, insect-resistant cotton was introduced into Australia, the third generation of the technology, Bollgard III, is making its debut throughout Australian cotton fields.

Following trial plantings last season, Bollgard III received Australian Pesticides and Veterinary Medicines Authority (AVPMA) approval earlier this year and has been commercially released to growers for this season’s plantings.

Shannon Hauf

Shannon Hauf

Bollgard III varieties are set to dominate sowings throughout the cotton-growing valleys of NSW and Queensland as sowing gets underway in Queensland’s central highlands.

Bollgard III is the third version of genetically-modified cotton developed by Monsanto and follows on from the successful Ingard (introduced into Australia in 1996) and Bollgard II (introduced 2004).

Compared to Bollgard II, Bollgard III provides growers with a more advanced management tool for combating insect pests, reducing pesticide sprays and countering the threat of insect resistance.

Three Bt proteins

Whereas Bollgard II had two, insect-killing Bt proteins, Cry1Ac and Cry2Ab, Bollgard III includes a third Bt protein, Vip3A.

The addition of the third protein increases the sustainability of the technology as it becomes increasingly difficult for cotton’s major pest, Helicoverpa, to develop resistance to more than one of the Bt proteins.

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Wee Waa-based Cotton Seed Distributors (CSD) has released five new Bollgard III varieties: one targeted at the southern market, one more suited to the western growing regions, and three mainstream lines.

CSD extension and development agronomist, James Quinn, said he expected a big uptake of Bollgard III this season with the potential for 80 percent or more of the national crop to be sown to the new type.

High yield potential

Much of the demand is being driven by the phenomenal yields of Bollgard III in earlier trials.

“One grower at Forbes with his first (Bollgard III) crop went 18.1 bales/hectare and a dryland crop on the Darling Downs went 11.7b/ha which are yields we used to dream of,” he said.

Mr Quinn said there would still be a small percentage of Bollgard II grown, but he predicted it would be outclassed by Bollgard III, plus growers would find the new Resistance Management Plan (RMP) for Bollgard III with its reduced refuge requirements and minimal pupae busting standards much more attractive (see related article: New resistance management plan for Bollgard III)

Bollgard IV and V

Monsanto global technology lead, Shannon Hauf, St Louis, US, said while Australia was the first country in the world to grow Bollgard III, the company’s scientists had already invented Bollgard IV and were looking into what proteins would make up a futuristic Bollgard V.

“Our team will spend the next 10 years bringing these technologies to the marketplace,” she said.

 

RELATED ARTICLE: New generation Bollgard III to blitz cotton plantings

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