Abstract

The concept of thresholds has many applications in weed science, depending on the response being measured. The most common adjectives used to describe thresholds are damage, economic, period, and action. Damage threshold is the term used to define the weed population at which a negative crop yield response is detected. An economic threshold is the weed population at which the cost of control is equal to the crop value increase from control of the weeds present. Economic threshold may be used to describe short-term effects of weed interference occurring in a single growing season, or multiple-season effects including some cost associated with seed produced by uncontrolled plants. The term period threshold implies that there are times during the crop cycle in which weeds are more or less damaging than at others. Action threshold is the point at which some control action is initiated, and usually includes economic considerations along with other less tangible factors such as aesthetics, risk aversion, or sociological pressures. Regardless of the type, thresholds imply that weed effects are population dependent, and as such, allow some type of prediction to be made relative to the consequences of control decisions. One successful approach to the implementation of thresholds has been through the development of computerized decision-aid software. These programs allow users to compare economic and environmental consequences of potential control actions before committing to one particular decision.

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