About Us
Our Project
Herbicide resistance is a growing problem in U.S. agriculture. Increasingly, growers, crop consultants, and other agricultural professionals are turning to integrated weed management (IWM), the practice of using multiple weed control tactics, to manage herbicide-resistant weeds on their farms. Combatting weeds with a combination of cultural, mechanical, and chemical strategies can create more sustainable and resilient weed control programs.
How GROW Can Help You
GROW (Getting Rid Of Weeds) is your trusted source on IWM tactics. Here you will find up-to-date, tested, and vetted resources on weed control tools such as cover crops, increased crop competition, harvest weed seed control and more.
Our Mission
GROW (Getting Rid of Weeds) is a scientist-led network coordinating research to help farmers across the U.S. fight herbicide resistance, by using a greater diversity of weed control strategies to complement chemical use.
Who We Are
The GROW team consists of agronomists, weed scientists, economists and communicators from all over the United States:
Outreach, Media, and Website
Victoria Ackroyd
Research Associate, University of Maryland; Visiting Scientist, USDA ARS Beltsville Agricultural Research Center
William Curran
Emeritus Professor of Weed Science & Extension Weed Specialist, Penn State University
Mid-Atlantic
Wesley Everman
Associate Professor of Small Grains and Weed Science,
North Carolina State University
Chris Reberg-Horton
Professor and Extension Organic Cropping Specialist,
North Carolina State University
North Central Region
Karla Gage
Assistant Professor of, Weed Science and Plant Biology, Southern Illinois University Carbondale
Southern Region
Western Region
Agricultural Economists
WHY “GROW” IS OUR NEW NAME
Originally known as the Integrated Weed Management Resource Center website, our group has now adopted the name GROW, which represents our goals:
- Getting Rid Of Weeds (GROW) through integrated weed management (IWM)
- Increasing the adoption of IWM practices
- Providing growers with reliable information to help eliminate weeds and slow the development of herbicide resistance
- Increasing yields as we get rid of weeds
The logo is green to symbolize that, while IWM includes chemical use, we are also proposing non-chemical (greener) strategies. The monocot and dicot leaves within the logo represent our coverage of all weed types in row crops.
This website will still act as a reliable resource center on integrated weed management practices, as well as a place to read the latest news on advances in IWM and the ongoing fight against herbicide resistance.