Key Area 3.3 Crop Protection Flashcards
What is crop protection?
The science and practice of managing plant diseases, weeds and other pests that damage agricultural crops.
Why is crop protection essential?
To ensure a sustained supply of good quality harvests and food security.
Why are weeds not good for crops?
They compete with the crops for the natural recourse.
What natural resources might weeds and crops compete for?
Light
Water
Soil nutrients
Space.
What do weeds do to the productivity of a crop?
Decrease it.
What are the 2 types of weeds?
Annual and Perennial.
What is an annual crop?
A crop that grows from seeds and completes its life cycle in one year.
What is a perennial crop?
One which regrows each year.
What are the adaptations of an annual weed?
Rapid growth following germination
Have a short life cycle
High seed out put
Long term seed viability (seeds remain dormant but still viable for long periods in the soil).
What are the adaptations of a perennial weed?
Have competition advantage through being established before crop growth
Have storage organs from the previous year (an energy source during the winter months)
Are able to reproduce vedgativley using specialised structures such as runners and bulbs.
What are plant pests?
Plant pests are unwanted organisms that feed on plant crops.
Why are plant pests unwanted?
They decrease yield as the pests damage the leaves and this reduces the plants ability to photosynthesise and lowers the energy available for plant growth.
How does disease affect the crops?
They reduce plant productivity and therefore decrease the crop yield.
What is the definition of a cultural means of crop protection?
A method that has been developed over long periods of time and are carried out by humans.
What is the basis of a cultural method?
Trial and error.
What are cultural means said to be?
Preventative rather than curative.
What are some example of cultural methods for crop protection?
Ploughing,
Weeding,
Crop rotation.