Noruron is applied at 0.75 to 4 kg/ha of active ingredient, typically supplied as wettable powder or granules.[4]
Performance
Norea (in conifer seedbeds in Connecticut) provided fair to excellent weed control for two months, at 1.5 to 2 lbs/ac (1.68 to 2.24 kg/Ha), with injury to pine and spruce seedlings in most tests, though at 4 lbs/ac it injured white pine. Norea's control was comparable to simazine but shorter-lasting.[8]
A 1960s trial found noruron promising for growing dioscorea crops (such as yams), as of the tested herbicides it showed the most control without causing crop-injury.[9]
Products
It has been sold under the tradename "Herban",[1] a 76% norea wettable powder.[10] "Daban-1", "Maban-2" were liquid formulations containing 1 lb per gallon Herban. Maban was registered in 1967 and discontinued in 1989.[11][12] Herban was trademarked in 1963, renewed in 1983, but expired in 2004.[13]
Maban was registered for use on cotton, drainage ditch banks, fencerows, noncrop areas, rights-of-way, and storage yards.[12]
References
^ abcdLewis, K.A., Tzilivakis, J., Warner, D. and Green, A. (2016) An international database for pesticide risk assessments and management. Human and Ecological Risk Assessment: An International Journal, 22(4), 1050-1064. DOI: 10.1080/10807039.2015.1133242
^Ahrens, J. F.; Merril, C. G.; Cubanski, M. (September 1976). "Herbicides for Conifer Seedbeds"(PDF). The Connecticut Agricultural Experiment Station (Bulletin 766). New Haven. Retrieved 13 June 2025.