2015 Lima Bean Herbicide Chart
Julie Kikkert, Team Leader, Extension Vegetable Specialist
Cornell Vegetable Program

Serious injury can be caused to lima beans if Eptam, Reflex, Assure II/Targa, or PostEmergence applications of Pursuit are used.
Herbicides that are labeled for lima beans in New York are given in the table below. Mark VanGessel from the University of Delaware provides the following information: on our loamy soils (approx. 1% organic matter) growers use 1.0 to 1.25 pints/A of Dual Magnum (rates similar for snap beans) and 1.5 to 2.0 oz of Pursuit at planting. They can be used pre-plant incorporated (PPI), but most farmers are applying them immediately after planting (PRE). Sandea is also labeled, but Pursuit is a better fit for the weeds in DE. Basagran, Sandea, Poast and Select Max are labeled for post-emergence control, with the choice depending on the weeds that emerge. We have a lot of Pursuit/Sandea resistant pigweeds in DE so be sure to rotate away from this mode of herbicide action in years that you are not growing lima beans in these fields.
Herbicides for Lima Bean Weed Control in NY in 2015 (pdf; 112KB)

Upcoming Events
Eden Area Winter Vegetable Meeting
February 4, 2026
North Collins, NY
Join us for a mix of industry updates, crop protection talks, pesticide safety programming, and fertility management discussions. This meeting is jointly hosted by the Cornell Vegetable Program and Timac Laing-Gro.
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February 9, 2026
Albion, NY
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March 5, 2026
Join us to learn about the Cornell African Eggplant Research Project and learn how you can participate! African eggplant, also known as Bitterball, Garden Egg, Kittley and other names, is an important crop for many members of our community with heritage from regions such as sub-Saharan Africa, Southeast Asia, and Brazil. Since 2024, the Cornell African Eggplant Research Project has been collaborating with growers and community partners across New York to develop high-quality varieties adapted to the Northeast U.S. In this meeting, we will share information about growing and preparing African eggplant, highlight our research to date, and invite partners to collaborate with us in our 2026 participatory breeding and variety selection efforts.
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