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- Title
THE DEVELOPMENT OF SELECTIVE HERBICIDES FOR KALE IN THE UNITED KINGDOM I. THE CROP, THE WEEDS AND THE PROBLEM.
- Authors
Elliott, J. G.; Cox, T. I.
- Abstract
The purpose of this paper is firstly to describe the background of an investigation started in 1961 to develop new herbicides for the control of weeds in agricultural kale, <em>Brassica oleracea</em> vars. <em>acephala</em> D.C. and <em>fruticosa</em> Metz, and secondly to present the results of four experiments concerned with the effects of weeds on the yield of kale. The results of the herbicide investigation are to be presented in subsequent papers. Kale as grown in the United Kingdom is a valuable fodder crop and relatively easy to grow, but beset by weeds against which existing mechanical and chemical methods of control have not usually been successful. The effect of weed competition on the yield of four farmers' crops was investigated in 1961 and 1962. When grown entirely free of weeds, the crops provided yields in the range of 20.9-34.5 tons of green material per acre. Where no attempt was made to control the weeds, the yields were reduced by 9.4, 14.5 and 18.9 tons/ac, respectively, in three experiments. In no case did kale, hoed only between the rows, produce as high a yield as the weed-free crop. Although variable in effect, uncontrolled weed growth early in the life of the crop always lowered the yield of kale.
- Subjects
UNITED Kingdom; HERBICIDES; KALE; WEEDS; FORAGE plants
- Publication
Weed Research, 1965, Vol 5, Issue 3, p257
- ISSN
0043-1737
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1111/j.1365-3180.1965.tb00350.x