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      Effects of Environmental Stress on Weed/Crop Interactions

      Weed Science
      Cambridge University Press (CUP)

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          Abstract

          All environmental factors that influence plant growth potentially can affect the ability of weeds and crops to exploit the environmental resources for which plants compete. Stressful levels of environmental factors such as temperature, light, and water and nutrient availability influence weed/crop interactions directly and also may interfere with (or enhance) weed control. Weed and crop species differing in photosynthetic pathway (C 3 vs C 4) are likely to respond differently to many of these factors. Long-term changes in the atmospheric concentrations of CO 2 and other radiatively-active “greenhouse gases” may exert direct physiological and indirect climatic effects on weed/crop interactions and influence weed management strategies. This review focuses on the effects of temperature, light, soil nutrients, water stress, and CO 2 concentration on weed/crop interactions with consideration of the potential impact of climate change.

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          Most cited references31

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          Competition Among Crop and Pasture Plants

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            Crop Water Deficits

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              The function, action and adaptive significance of phytochrome in light-grown plants

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Weed Science
                Weed sci.
                Cambridge University Press (CUP)
                0043-1745
                1550-2759
                September 1995
                June 12 2017
                September 1995
                : 43
                : 3
                : 483-490
                Article
                10.1017/S0043174500081510
                cdeea065-2165-43cc-95f6-0084915a9b44
                © 1995

                https://www.cambridge.org/core/terms

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