Am. Mortimer et Je. Hill, Weed species shifts in response to broad spectrum herbicides in sub-tropical and tropical crops, 1999 BRIGHTON CONFERENCE: WEEDS, VOLS 1-3, 1999, pp. 425-436
Weed species shifts in response to broad spectrum herbicide use in cotton,
maize, rice, citrus and rubber and oil palm plantations are reviewed using
data from long term studies available from the literature. Broad spectrum h
erbicide use has changed the composition of the weed flora in all of these
crops. In maize and cotton, zero tillage regimes have resulted in successio
nal changes towards ephemeral broadleaf weed species. Shorter term shifts a
nd cyclical changes in abundance of weeds have been documented in citrus an
d in oil palm and rubber plantations; in the latter the response of perenni
al grasses to non-selective herbicides is strongly influenced by mulching.
In irrigated rice, weed species shifts (species composition and abundance)
are rapid and responsive to both method of crop establishment and herbicide
use, competitive release being one mechanism by which relative abundance i
s altered. The absence of sufficient knowledge of life histories of tropica
l and sub-tropical weeds means that it is difficult to speculate on the imp
act of long-term use of non-selective herbicides in resistant crops on the
weed flora and emphasises the need for experimental assessment.