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Long‐term modelling of weed control strategies: analysis of threshold‐based options for weed species with contrasted competitive abilities

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TLDR
In this article, a simple life cycle-based demography model was adapted for two contrasting weed species (Alopecurus myosuroides and Poa annual) to investigate the relationship between weed control strategies based on density thresholds and both the frequency of herbicide use and the long-term economic profitability.
Abstract
A simple life-cycle-based demography model was adapted for two contrasting weed species (Alopecurus myosuroides and Poa annual. This model included a seed production function that accounted for population self-regulation through weed:weed interactions. The A. myosuroides version of the model was tested with field data. Long-term simulations of population demography were then performed to investigate the relationship between weed control strategies based on density thresholds and both the frequency of herbicide use and the long-term economic profitability. This study confirms that threshold-based weed management strategies are more cost-effective than spraying every year and may allow important reductions in herbicide use. However, after the first transient years of either systematically spraying or withholding herbicide, the long-term spraying frequency was insensitive to threshold values between 0.01 and 100 plants m -2 . The highest long-term profitability was obtained for the lowest threshold tested, and the profitability decreased rapidly when the threshold was raised above 4-6 and 10-20 plants m -2 for A. myosuroides and P. annua respectively. The study thus indicates that the exact threshold value is of little importance for the long-term reliance of the system on herbicide, provided that it is reasonably low. For species with low competitive ability, high thresholds may be used in some cropping systems to reduce the spraying frequency for environmental considerations, but those options would also reduce the profitability if no compensatory measures were taken.

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Predicting weed emergence: a review of approaches and future challenges

TL;DR: A number of major challenges remain (e.g. population variability, dormancy and the quality of the input data) that must be overcome before these emergence models can be implemented in practice.
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Field weed population dynamics : a review of model approaches and applications

TL;DR: It is hoped that the overview provided by this review will inspire weed modellers and that it will serve as a basis for discussion and as a frame of reference when the modelling of weed populations to a new level, developing new approaches and tackling new application domains.
Journal ArticleDOI

Iterative design and evaluation of rule-based cropping systems: methodology and case studies. A review

TL;DR: A generic approach combining iteratively design of cropping systems and evaluation of their performances is presented, in a perspective of integrated crop production (ICP) prototyping.
Journal ArticleDOI

Strategies and tactics for herbicide use reduction in field crops in Canada: A review

TL;DR: This paper is a review of four topics related to herbicide use reduction on field crops in Canada: (1) broad strategies and (2) specific tactics for herbicides more efficiently; (3) factors affecting adoption; and (4) research approaches for improving the implementation of herbicides use reduction.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Assessing the impact of pesticides on the environment

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors address a two-part question: what factors should be taken into consideration to assess pesticide environmental impact, and how can impact be quantified? As the environmental impact of a pesticide depends on its dispersion in the environment and on its toxicological properties, the literature on these topics is reviewed to address the first part of the question.
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On the conceptual basis of crop loss assessment: the threshold theory

TL;DR: This paper focuses on the individual farmer as a decision maker and the services the pathologist can render him; it deals with tactical decisions.
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Quantitative relationships between the weed flora after cultivation and the seed population in the soil

TL;DR: Comparisons were made between the numbers of weed seedlings emerging after seedbed preparation and theNumbers of apparently viable seeds extracted by sieving and flotation from samples of the top 10 cm of soil when soil moisture was adequate, and when dry weather followed cultivation.
Journal ArticleDOI

The threshold concept and its application to weed science.

TL;DR: The concept of thresholds has many applications in weed science, depending on the response being measured, and implies that weed effects are population dependent, and allow some type of prediction to be made relative to the consequences of control decisions.
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