Pulse Brain · Growing Health Evidence Index
Peer-reviewed

An ecological future for weed science to sustain crop production and the environment. A review

Chloe MacLaren, Jonathan Storkey, Alexander Menegat, Helen Metcalfe, Katharina Dehnen‐Schmutz

Agronomy for Sustainable Development · 2020

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Summary

Abstract Sustainable strategies for managing weeds are critical to meeting agriculture’s potential to feed the world’s population while conserving the ecosystems and biodiversity on which we depend. The dominant paradigm of weed management in developed countries is currently founded on the two principal tools of herbicides and tillage to remove weeds. However, evidence of negative environmental impacts from both tools is growing, and herbicide resistance is increasingly prevalent. These challenges emerge from a lack of attention to how weeds interact with and are regulated by the agroecosystem as a whole. Novel technological tools proposed for weed control, such as new herbicides, gene editing, and seed destructors, do not address these systemic challenges and thus are unlikely to provide

Source type
Peer-reviewed study
DOI
10.1007/s13593-020-00631-6
Catalogue ID
SNmoh7j79q-l2ka0q
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