Results 291 to 300 of about 8,406,601 (342)
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Weed Management for Parasitic Weeds
2014Parasitic weeds, representing more than 4,000 species of more than 20 higher plant families, are one of the most destructive and intractable pests to agricultural production in both developed and developing countries. Parasitic weeds cause heavy damage to numerous crops by reducing both crop yield and quality.
Radi Aly, Neeraj Kumar Dubey
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Integrated Weed Management: Knowledge-Based Weed Management Systems
Weed Science, 2008The fundamental role of integrated weed management (IWM) is to provide a source of scientifically based knowledge from which growers can make informed weed-management decisions. The objectives of this article include (1) highlighting the essential knowledge base required for the success of an IWM cropping system, (2) identifying the barriers to ...
Clarence J. Swanton +3 more
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Challenges and prospects for weed management in Pakistan: A review
, 2020Weed management has become increasingly important in the backdrop of sustainable crop production, uncertain climatic patterns and food security concerns in Pakistan.
Amar Matloob +7 more
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Soil Microorganisms for Weed Management
Expanding the Context of Weed Management, 2020Traditional methods of weed management have not considered the microbial or other biological factors that influence plant growth; however, incorporating this knowledge may expand weed management possibilities to develop weed-suppressive soils ...
A. C. Kennedy
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Pest Management Science, 2019
Implementation of integrated weed management (IWM) has been poor, with little evidence of concomitant reductions in herbicide use. Non-chemical methods are often adopted as a means of compensating for reduced herbicide efficacy, due to increasing ...
S. Moss
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Implementation of integrated weed management (IWM) has been poor, with little evidence of concomitant reductions in herbicide use. Non-chemical methods are often adopted as a means of compensating for reduced herbicide efficacy, due to increasing ...
S. Moss
semanticscholar +1 more source
2009
AbstractThis chapter presents weeds common in lentil fields and their management (i.e. through preventive measures, and cultural, mechanical, chemical and integrated control methods).
J. P. Yenish +3 more
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AbstractThis chapter presents weeds common in lentil fields and their management (i.e. through preventive measures, and cultural, mechanical, chemical and integrated control methods).
J. P. Yenish +3 more
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New directions for integrated weed management: Modern technologies, tools and knowledge discovery
Advances in Agronomy, 2019Weed science, as an integral part of agricultural production needs to evolve by moving away from its mono-disciplinary perspective at targeting weeds, sometimes a single species, through the overreliance on few single herbicide mechanisms of action ...
Nicholas E. Korres +10 more
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The use of agricultural robots in weed management and control
Robotics and automation for improving agriculture, 2019Weed management and control are essential for the production of high-yielding and high-quality crops, and advances in weed control technology have had a huge impact on agricultural productivity.
B. Steward, Jingyao Gai, Lie Tang
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Weed management practices in Argentina crops
Weed technology, 2019Data from surveys are used to help quantitatively diagnose the relative importance of chemical and nonchemical management practices, identify weed problems, and provide potential solutions.
J. Scursoni +4 more
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2017
The book chapter presents and discusses the latest methods in non-chemical weed control, including mechanical weeding, use of cover crops and mulches and thermal weed control.
Melander, Bo +8 more
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The book chapter presents and discusses the latest methods in non-chemical weed control, including mechanical weeding, use of cover crops and mulches and thermal weed control.
Melander, Bo +8 more
openaire +4 more sources

