TEXT 6. The control of weeds and plant disease

In crop production the control of weeds, diseases and pests is essential to obtain high yields. A11 three may be controlled by sound farm practices. These include the choice of clean seed and the growing of varieties of crop which can resist disease. They also include careful cultivation, both pre-sowing and post-sowing, and the use of chemicals.

Weeds reduce crop yields on account of the fact that they compete with crops for water, soil nutrients and light. They also make harvesting difficult. Most weeds are aggressive and invasive, they grow quickly and spread far, and so are difficult to get rid of. One recommended way of eradicating many persistent weeds is first to plough up the roots and underground parts of the plant. Then the soil may be cultivated lightly, or rotavated, on one or more occasions after the first ploughing.

The principal reason for cultivating the soil is to kill weeds. Weeds may also be killed by means of chemicals which have the collective name of herbicides. Weed-killers are of two basic types: selective and non-selective. The former remove certain weeds from certain crops. For rice we can spray the herbicide 2:4-D or MCPA over the whole crop at low concentra­tions ( -1 lb. per acre). The rice will not be affected, but many of the rice weeds will be killed. Non-selective weed killers may be used for removing all vegetation e.g. as brush killers. They must be used extremely carefully for the simple reason that they will eradicate all plants on contact - which includes the crop itself. They are usually used before sowing or before the emergence of the crop itself.

Plant diseases are caused by organisms which use the crop plant as a 'host'. These are mainly micro-organisms e.g. fungi, bacteria and viruses.

These parasitic micro-organisms live off the food nutrients in the tissue cells of the plants. They frequently kill the host tissues, and either the whole plant or a part of it is damaged and killed. Micro-organisms are repro­duced and spread by minute bodies such as spores, fungi and bacteria.

Wind, water, diseased plants, cuttings and tubers, animals, men and insects are some of the means whereby disease is disseminated.

It is very difficult to kill the fungi and bacteria, or to make the virus which is inside the host plant inactive. But the evolution of plant varieties which can resist disease has completely changed methods of disease control. A number of varieties have been evolved and are now available to farmers. So the control of plant diseases has increasingly become a matter of pre­vention.

Fungi, which attack the aerial parts of the crop, can be controlled by means of fungicides. These are sprayed or dusted on to the plant surfaces.

They should be applied before the plant is seriously damaged. Sometimes spray and dust is applied whether disease is present or not. In any case, it is necessary to examine crops frequently for signs of disease.

Soil-borne diseases are much more difficult to control. There are various ways of treating the soil. One way is to use chemicals that easily change into a gas or vapour, which enter the soil and kill the harmful organ­isms. The soil is covered with a polythene sheet and the volatile chemical is injected into the soil. After about 24 hours the sheet is removed and the soil is allowed to air for a few days before use.