- “Using different strategies and tactics to manage weeds”
- “To know your fields and know what kind of problems were there last year. Build your plan on that experience and even better prevent that those weed problems don't come back again by growing crops that can control them and stabilize your soil.”
- “It consists of minimizing the negative effect of weeds on the main crop with a viable agronomic management, economically profitable and preserving natural resources”
- “It implies the knowledge of the biology and ecology of weeds”
- “Use many tools at once, combination of chemical and mechanical control, prevent establishment, combination of short and long term considerations”
Figure 1: Integrated weed management tactics may affect one or more axes in the weed life cycle. They may prevent the establishment of seedlings from the seedbank (axis 1), reduce the impact established weeds have on the crop (axis 2), or reduce the weed seed/bud return to the soil.
Successful IWM strategies will combine tactics from all or most of these 5 pillars of the IWM Framework (Figure 2):
- Diverse cropping system for increased or equal crop yields or profitability compared to conventional systems
- Cultivar choice and establishment: Selecting weed-suppressive and tolerant crops
- Field and soil management, enhancing crop growth
- Targeted control tactics to disturb weeds life cycle
- Monitoring & evaluation
Figure 2 Five pillars of Integrated Weed Management (blue) with examples of weed management tactics and the key mechanism with which the tactic contributes to reduce weed pressure in the crop.