Public enemy No. 1 for corn and soybean farmers, the Palmer amaranth weed, has made new incursions into Minnesota by way of livestock feed.
The Minnesota Department of Agriculture said this week that cows have eaten remnants of the weed in feed, then eliminated it in manure that farmers spread on fields.
This is bad news for corn and soybean farmers, both because the weed grows and proliferates quickly and because it is resistant to multiple herbicides. It can grow up to 8 feet tall with a woody stem thick enough to damage farm equipment that tries to mow it down.
Officials at North Dakota State University, who are also gearing up to fight the weed, say the spread of Palmer amaranth can reduce yields by up to 91% for corn and 79% for soybeans.
The weed has now been confirmed in six Minnesota counties. The Department of Agriculture is encouraging farmers, especially those who spread manure from feedlots on their land, to look for Palmer amaranth, take pictures of suspicious plants, contact the department and save samples of the weed in plastic bags in the refrigerator.
The weed, which grows up to 3 inches a day and can produce a half-million seeds per plant, was first observed in Minnesota in conservation land in 2016. Thirteen landowners planted it unknowingly in a mix of native grass and flower seeds sold by a small company in Cottonwood, Minn.
This past fall, however, the weed was discovered in a soybean field in Redwood County, and then along a road in Jackson County. The findings were announced this week.
"Up until that point, all the finds had been in conservation plantings," said Allen Sommerfeld, a spokesman for the Minnesota Department of Agriculture.