Hey! Content is protected. You can share this page via the share button 😊
Master Principles and Practices of Weed Management – Notes, Case Studies & Practical Insights – with Rahul

Economic importance of weed and losses caused by weeds

A. Beneficial Effects

  • Helping to conserve soil moisture and prevent erosion. A ground cover of weeds will reduce the amount of bare soil exposed helping to conserve nutrients, particularly nitrogen which could otherwise be leached away, especially on light soils.
  • Food and shelter can be provided for natural enemies of pests and even alternative food sources for crop pests. The actual presence of weed cover may be a factor in increasing effectiveness of biological control of pests and reducing pest damage.
  • Weeds can also be valuable indicators of growing conditions in a field, for example of water levels, compaction and pH.
  • Weeds can be an important source of food for wildlife, especially birds. Bird populations have been declining on farmland over the last few decades and leaving weeds as a resource has been shown to help revive bird populations.

 

B. Harmful effects

  • Weeds have serious impacts on agricultural production. It is estimated that in general weeds cause 5% loss in agricultural production in most of developed countries, 10% loss in less developed countries and 25% loss in least developed countries.
  • Weeds compete with crops for water soil, nutrients, light, and space, and thus reduce the crop yields. An estimate shows that weeds can deprive the crops 47% N, 42% P, 50% K, 39% Ca and 24% Mg of their nutrient uptake.
  • Weeds are also act as alternate hosts that harbor insects, pests and diseases and other micro-organisms. Alternate hosts of some of the pest and diseases

Crop

Pest

Alternate host

Red gram

Gram caterpillar

Amaranthus, Datura

Castor

Hairy Caterpillar

Crotalaria sp.

Rice

Stem borer

Echinocholoa , Panicum

Wheat

Black rust

Agropyron rapens

Pearl Millet

Ergot

Cenchruciliariss

Maize

Downy mildew

Sacharum spontaneum

 

  • Some weeds release into the soil inhibitors of poisonous substances that may be harmful to the crop plants, human beings and livestock. Health problems caused by weeds to humans.

 

Health Problem

Weed

Hay fever and Asthma

Pollen of Ambrosia and Franseria

Dermotitis

Parthenium, Ambrosia

Itching and Inflammation

Utrica sp

African sleeping sickness

Brush weeds

Malaria, encephaliltis and filaria caused by

mosquito

Aquatic weeds like Pistia lanceolate, Salvinia auriculata

 

  • Weeds reduce the quality of marketable agricultural produce. Contamination of weed seeds of Datura, Argemone, Brassica etc., is harmful to human health and weed seeds present in the produce cause odd odour sometimes.
  • Weeds not only reduce yield but also interfere with agricultural operations. Weeds make mechanical sowing a difficult process and render harvesting difficult, leading to increased expenditure on labour, equipment and chemicals for their removal.
  • In aquatic environment, weeds block the flow of water in canals, water-transport system and drainage system, rendering navigation difficult. The dense growth of aquatic weeds pollutes water by deoxygenating it and killing the fishes.
  • Weeds are also a nuisance and a fire hazard along railway lines, roads, right-of- ways, airports, forest and industrial sites.
Home Courses + Research Blog
Scroll to Top