Using herbicides in Conservation Agriculture systems: the state of the art

· Burleigh Dodds Science Publishing
Ebook
22
Pages
Eligible
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About this ebook

Conservation agriculture has received increasing interest worldwide as a cropping system addressing the future challenge of feeding an increasing world population while minimizing the negative environmental and climate impacts of agriculture and preserving soil fertility. There is an ongoing discussion whether conservation agriculture, adopting all three principles, will exacerbate problems with weeds and hence increases the need for weed control including herbicides but in practice synthetic herbicides are an integral part of a conservation agriculture cropping system. The primary concerns associated with herbicide performance in conservation agriculture are 1) the higher content of organic matter in the uppermost soil layer that may reduce the efficacy of residual herbicides and 2) the occurrence of crop residues on the soil surface that may intercept herbicide reducing deposition on the soil and weeds. This chapter will address these concerns but also discuss some recent developments in conservation agriculture that could influence herbicide use.

About the author

Professor Per Kudsk is Head of the Crop Health Section in the Department of Agroecology at Aarhus University, Denmark. An internationally-known expert in integrated weed management, he is a former President of the European Weed Research Society. Professor Kudsk has played a leading role in EU research projects such as IWMPRAISE and the ENDURE Network as well as in the European Plant Protection Organisation (EPPO).

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