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Dow and DuPont announce a definitive agreement under which the companies will merge, then subsequently spin off into three independent companies. The Trapezoid symbol is made up of two parts — the design and its containing device. The elements of the symbol represent several aspects of Pioneer's business.
The upper part is an abstract plant symbolizing the vigor of the brand — constantly thriving and growing. The flower part of the design is the sign for infinity, referring to something that goes on forever infinite growth. Deferred payment loan now available for Pioneer silage inoculants.
Pioneer Forage Forum audio program available on Pioneer. Pioneer Hi-Bred experts offer tips to manage for higher yields in soybeans. Early scouting can help manage corn pests; late planting, wet soils may lead to more corn pests. DuPont receives Canadian regulatory approval for high oleic soybean trait.
Despite planting delays for some Corn Belt areas, still too early for hybrid maturity switching - Pioneer Hi-Bred, university studies show yield, profit advantage over switching hybrids.
Monsanto challenges unauthorized use of Roundup Ready technology by DuPont. April Pioneer Hi-Bred, University of Tennessee research shows foliar fungicides can boost corn yields - Timely applications help growers battle gray leaf spot. Pioneer Hi-Bred receives Canada registration for first and only canola hybrid resistant to clubroot. Disease, pest knowledge, variety selection set stage for higher soybean yields - Pioneer Hi-Bred experts offer tips to help maximize seed performance.
March Pioneer experts provide silage management tips as temperatures rise - Proper management, inoculation aid in reducing spoilage, losses. Pioneer Hi-Bred expands its insect rearing facility to support its insect control research efforts.
February Pioneer Hi-Bred offers growers tools for determining economic seeding rate - Price volatility plays a vital role in growers' planting decisions. Management practices and advanced hybrids boost continuous corn yields - Pioneer agronomy experts share insights on impact of crop rotation on yield. Pioneer Hi-Bred announces Optimum brand innovations - Newly named family of traits, products, programs offers growers more flexibility, choices.
DuPont unveils innovative mobile wind machines to help improve corn yield. University of Delaware signs commercialization agreement with DuPont on corn disease trait. January Check stress emergence, high suitability ratings for corn-after-corn success - Pioneer provides ratings to help growers choose right product for right acre.
Expanded alfalfa seed options help growers match field conditions - Pioneer Hi-Bred provides growers improved protection through trait selection. DuPont and Athenix collaborate to advance insect control in corn, soybeans. Pioneer Hi-Bred releases 96 new hybrids for planting - New genetics, localized testing improve corn product lineup.
DuPont insect protection product Optimum AcreMax 1 reaches regulatory milestone. December World-record soybean producer extends plus per bushel production to commercial fields - Pioneer brand 94B73 yields bushels per acre in Cullers' contest plot. DuPont acquires ag data management business to enhance information solutions for growers. Growers planting Pioneer brand hybrids win 70 percent of national titles in U. Growers planting Pioneer brand sorghum hybrids win nearly all national categories in National Sorghum Producers' Yield and Management Contest.
DuPont unveils new strategy to expand its seed business - Pioneer Hi-Bred partners with seed companies to introduce new products, brands. Strong hybrid emergence, stalk shredding improve yields in continuous, no-till corn - Pioneer Hi-Bred and University of Missouri share initial research results. Across Canada, Pioneer Hi-Bred new data shows double stack corn hybrids significantly out-yielded triple stacks on rotated ground.
Pioneer Hi-Bred and Farms Technology launch new instant hedging and cash grain commodity transaction service. Hybrid maturity switches based on long-term research.
DuPont to build corn seed production capacity in Hermiston, Oregon to meet strong global demand. Pioneer Hi-Bred research brings new levels of protection against soybean diseases - Higher levels of resistance combat sudden death syndrome SDS and soybean cyst nematode SCN. Breakthrough genetic solution for clubroot coming soon - New canola hybrid from Pioneer Hi-Bred will be the first product available with resistance to the disease.
Pioneer Hi-Bred takes legal action in Canada to protect Pioneer brand. Pioneer Hi-Bred introduces new Y Series Pioneer brand low linolenic soybeans for , announces premiums for low linolenic soybean growers. DuPont opens facility for corn research in Bangalore, India.
Pioneer Hi-Bred offers tips to maximize feedstock quality - Harvesting maturity and silage additives are key to nutritional value. New Pioneer corn numbering system provides growers more information, makes CRM and technology identification easier. New DuPont laser technology speeds development of higher yielding corn and soybeans. DuPont boosts seed research in Europe to extend leadership position - Two new state-of-the-art research centers to deliver higher yielding corn and sunflower hybrids.
Pioneer and Kansas State University research recommends irrigating through grain-filling stage - Research provides at-season recommendations. DuPont obtains biotechnology endorsement for Pioneer brand products: U. Trait scores help growers make informative seed selections - Pioneer seed rating charts offer field-by-field management.
DuPont and Hexima Ltd. Pioneer Hi-Bred expands MarketPoint resource into Iowa and Nebraska - Web-based service tool links growers, end users to market quality grain. DuPont soybean leadership advances with U.
Federal Register: - Determination of nonregulated status for Pioneer Hi-Bred soybean genetically engineered for tolerance to glyphosate and acetolactate synthase-inhibiting herbicides designated as transformation event Pioneer brand soybeans from DuPont deliver step-change in soybean yields - New generation of soybean varieties is largest product launch in Pioneer Hi-Bred's history. Pioneer Hi-Bred researcher cites scouting yips for monitoring Asian soybean rust.
New DuPont molecular markers increase soybean productivity. DuPont opens new maize research center in northern Mexico. Early signs indicate potentially fewer soybean aphids in the US in - Monitoring fields is still key to managing problem areas, say Pioneer experts. Black cutworms moving further north into U. Midwestern cornfields - Pioneer recommends early scouting to monitor potential outbreaks.
Pioneer Hi-Bred recommends early scouting for potential insect problems - Wet conditions, delayed corn planting may lead to more pest challenges. DuPont reaffirms expectations for North America seed corn market share.
Alfalfa management practices aid in curing process. DuPont partners with China to increase farm productivity. Pioneer Forage Forum features nutrition, feeding information for dairy industry - Blogs, podcasts engage dairy industry on Pioneer, university research.
DuPont purchases equity stake in Farms Technology. Long-term research shows that full-season corn hybrids are the best choice, even if delayed planting - Pioneer Hi-Bred, university studies indicate yield, profit advantage over switch to early hybrids.
Pioneer Hi-Bred and Asoyia enter into ultra low lin soybean IP agreement - Program offers attractive premiums for soybean growers. Pioneer Hi-Bred to build permanent research site in Eastern South Dakota, reinforces long-term commitment to product development in the region. DuPont donates sequences from corn disease agent to advance research. DuPont opens new seed production plant to meet increasing demand for Pioneer brand canola.
Research confirms better oil from new DuPont high oleic soybean trait - Bunge, DuPont alliance on track to deliver first biotech product with direct consumer benefits. DuPont sees large growth opportunities for seed business in Eastern Europe. DuPont launches next generation technology to accelerate corn research and increase productivity.
Pioneer Hi-Bred innovation to increase corn yields, simplify compliance - Optimum AcreMax new insect protection system introduced to U. DuPont innovation to increase corn yields, simplify compliance - Optimum AcreMax new insect protection system introduced to U.
Crop management challenges increase with early corn planting - Pioneer provides tips for managing early-season stress. DuPont significantly increases seed production acres for second consecutive year. DuPont launches Online MarketPoint resource for agriculture industry - Web-based service links growers with end users to market quality grain. Planting corn after corn demands top-of-game management - Pioneer agronomists offer best management practices to help maintain yields.
DuPont unveils strategies to increase ag productivity. DuPont and Precision BioSciences collaborate to accelerate crop product development - Genome engineering technology to bring new choices, more options to global agriculture. Borlaug Hall of Laureates. DuPont hosts meeting of leading plant scientists to improve world agricultural productivity - Three-day symposium focuses on improving drought tolerance. Pioneer Hi-Bred announces expansion in the greater Des Moines, Iowa area - Regulatory group will relocate to Ankeny to support growth, increase capacity.
DuPont announces expansion at Pioneer Hi-Bred production facility in York, Nebraska, part of ongoing effort to meet high demand for Pioneer brand seed corn. Pioneer provides growers information for crop rotation decisions, planting tips. National Corn Growers Association recognizes seed companies for corn yield contest success.
Pioneer releases 59 new corn hybrids for planting - Twenty-three new genetic platforms introduced. DuPont congratulates U. DuPont congratulates David Hula for highest overall yield in U. National Corn Yield Contest - Growers planting Pioneer brand hybrids win 20 of 27 national titles in contest. Project to develop more nutritious sorghum announces scientific breakthrough. Crop Insight: High oleic soybean. Midwestern elevators offer premiums for Pioneer brand low linolenic soybeans.
Pioneer develops, produces, and markets hybrid corn, sorghum, sunflower, soybean, alfalfa, wheat, canola, and vegetable seeds. The company dominates most of the markets in which it participates, holding more than a 40 percent share of the North American seed corn market, and even higher shares in European markets. The company was instrumental in one of the most important genetic accomplishments of American agriculture, the development of hybrid corn. Pioneer has in recent years become increasingly involved in the use of biotechnology.
Always known as a very independent company, Pioneer agreed to be purchased by chemical giant Dupont in to stay competitive in a rapidly changing industry. Before the company was created, it was commonly assumed that a farmer's best-looking corn yielded the highest-producing seeds. Farmers took their handsomest ears to university-sponsored countywide and statewide contests to be judged and used as the following season's seed. But a select group of people questioned the efficacy of this seed-choosing process.
One of those forward-looking people was young Henry A. At 16, he conducted a field test pitting one of the area's best-looking ears of seed corn against one of the ugliest, and the ugliest ear outyielded the pretty one. The tassels of corn grown in test fields were removed to isolate a hybrid's desirable characteristics.
Studies made during the first two decades of the 20th century revealed that yield varied greatly with the quality of seed: the seed yielding in the top 10 percent outproduced that in the bottom 10 percent by an average of 25 bushels per acre. At a time when farmers generally expected to yield about 40 bushels per acre, the disparity was astounding.
Unfortunately, the results of these tests would have seriously undermined the university-sponsored 'pretty corn' contests and many researchers' findings were not published. Henry Wallace had an advantage over many researchers, however: his father, Henry C. Wallace, owned a progressive farming newspaper, Wallace's Farmer. The Wallace family provided a heritage of farming leadership that helped launch Pioneer: young Henry's uncle had served on President Theodore Roosevelt's first Commission on Life in Rural America, and in , his father was appointed to be U.
Secretary of Agriculture. Henry A. Wallace inherited the editor's chair at Wallace's Farmer that year and got both a forum for his studies and an advertising medium for his seed. When Henry, his brother Jim, and several partners founded the Hi-Bred Corn Company in Johnstown, Iowa in , it was the first business created for the specific purpose of developing and marketing hybrid seed corn.
Hi-Bred's first seed crop consisted of 40 acres of hand-planted, hand-picked corn. Sales doubled in , prompting Hi-Bred to purchase 80 additional acres and create a Parent Seed Department. Soon, Pioneer's hybrid seeds dominated Iowa corn yield contests. The majority of farmers, who still relied on open-pollinated seed, complained that hybrid corn was too costly and unrealistic to produce and use, so the contests were split into two separate divisions.
The s brought depression to the world economy and drought, erosion, and pestilence to the fields of the Midwest. The brutal growing conditions were both a blessing and a curse for Hi-Bred. Several breeds of corn failed during the harsh drought of , but other lines endured the weather long enough to produce a crop. In comparison with open-pollinated fields, which performed miserably, Hi-Bred was able to show a significant advantage in hybrid corn.
As word of Hi-Bred's relative success spread, demand for the seed increased. To market the product, the company instituted the 'farmer-salesman concept,' where farmers worked part-time for Hi-Bred and full-time on their own farms.
This sales method became an industry standard and was continued throughout the century. These local representatives were familiar to their customers and had firsthand knowledge of the product and its performance.
Farmer-salesmen often used eight-pound samples of seed to graphically illustrate Hi-Bred seed's advantages versus open-pollinated seed.
Skeptics soon learned that the commercial seed produced heartier, stronger, more uniform plants and yielded about 20 bushels more per acre.
Pioneer's eggs and broiler hens became a more significant part of the business during the s as well. By the end of the decade, nearly all farmers had made the transition to hybrid corn seed.
With much of the world engaged in war, the United States became the world's granary. Pioneer chalked up several "firsts" during the prosperous s: the first electronic analysis of research and sales data, the first sorghum hybrid breeding program, and the first attempts at alternative packaging.
Research facilities were expanded to Florida and South America, and Pioneer entered into a joint venture with the Arnold Thomas Company to produce alfalfa hybrids. By the end of the decade, corn sales rose to , bushels per year. The company's upper management clarified the company's four guiding principles in a booklet titled, "The Long Look.
Farming in America had changed dramatically since Pioneer was created. The number of farms had decreased from 6. When Pioneer first sold corn seed, the average family farm consisted of acres producing a variety of livestock and crops for subsistence and commercial use; by the s, most farmers devoted their acre farms to a single crop. Technological improvements in corn harvesters in the s permitted farmers to shell corn as it was mechanically "picked" and dry and store it on the farm, saving time and money.
These advances made new demands on hybrid corn: it had to shell easier and dry faster. Farmers averaged three hours of work per bushel of corn in , but advances in equipment, pesticides, fertilizers, and especially hybridization had shortened that time to six minutes. Higher yields meant higher profits and a better standard of living for many farm families.
Pioneer concentrated on overseas development during the s, establishing joint ventures in Australia, Argentina, and South Africa.
And as concerns about overpopulation and global hunger mounted, Pioneer strove for ever higher yields and worked to lengthen the company's growing season by creating its first winter nursery, in Hawaii.
The fiftieth state's year-round growing season permitted three crops of seed per year. But with its eyes on foreign development, Pioneer lost market share in America. By the s, the U. DeKalb AgResearch Inc. The rival company introduced a revolutionary hybrid that gave it a slender lead in the industry by the end of the decade. But by , each of the seed corn producers held 22 percent of the hybrid seed corn market.
In , Pioneer went public and reorganized its operations. Prior to this time, Pioneer was a federation of geographically-based companies. Each independent dealer purchased its seed from Pioneer's centralized research division, but was responsible for its own operations. The incorporation and reorganization also brought about the formation of the Cereal Seed Division to breed wheat.
Pioneer made acquisitions to diversify primarily within the hybrid seed business. The company expanded its alfalfa and soybean seed research with the purchase of the Arnold Thomas Co. The acquisition of NORAND, a computer company, put Pioneer in debt for the first time since , but the parent applied the new subsidiary's hand-held computer technology to field research and sales programs.
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