Survey of herbicide-resistant weed management in oil palm estates from Peninsular Malaysia and Indonesia

Background: The use of herbicides is a common practice to control weeds in oil palm plantation. However, high dependency on herbicides causes intense selection pressure, which could lead to the evolution of herbicide resistance in weed. Objective: To assess planters’ understanding of herbicide resis...

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Published in:Advances in Weed Science
Main Author: Seng C.T.; Yusop N.; Pauzi S.A.; Ramli N.K.C.M.; Aani S.N.A.; Sahal M.S.A.M.; Pahang J.T.; Purba E.; Sa’adah N.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Sociedade Brasileira da Ciencia das Plantas Daninha 2024
Online Access:https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85208460489&doi=10.51694%2fAdvWeedSci%2f2024%3b42%3a00020&partnerID=40&md5=fe9892aa8fe10b1a84a9728110180aa0
id 2-s2.0-85208460489
spelling 2-s2.0-85208460489
Seng C.T.; Yusop N.; Pauzi S.A.; Ramli N.K.C.M.; Aani S.N.A.; Sahal M.S.A.M.; Pahang J.T.; Purba E.; Sa’adah N.
Survey of herbicide-resistant weed management in oil palm estates from Peninsular Malaysia and Indonesia
2024
Advances in Weed Science
42

10.51694/AdvWeedSci/2024;42:00020
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85208460489&doi=10.51694%2fAdvWeedSci%2f2024%3b42%3a00020&partnerID=40&md5=fe9892aa8fe10b1a84a9728110180aa0
Background: The use of herbicides is a common practice to control weeds in oil palm plantation. However, high dependency on herbicides causes intense selection pressure, which could lead to the evolution of herbicide resistance in weed. Objective: To assess planters’ understanding of herbicide resistance management practices. Methods: Data were gathered via the application of questionnaires during the 2022 growing season to planters working with oil palm in Peninsular Malaysia and Indonesia. There were 101 respondents, covering about 14 states. Results: Planters (75 to 85% respondents) found herbicide rotation, cover crops, and pre-emergence herbicide application effective against herbicide-resistant weeds, but high herbicide costs hindered their selection of chemical solutions. Peninsular Malaysia planters (30 to 78% respondents) reported five major putative resistant weeds such as Eleusine indica (L.) Gaertn., Clidemia hirta (L.) D. Don., Melastoma malabathricum (L.), Ischaemum muticum (L.), and Asystasia gangetica (L.) T. Anderson. Indonesian planters (28 to 43% respondents) faced putative resistance in E. indica and C. hirta. Peninsular Malaysia’s higher incidence of putative resistance was linked to insufficient knowledge of herbicide classification, less use of tank-mixed herbicides, and reduced herbicide rates, potentially fostering resistance evolution. Conclusions: The survey revealed that Indonesia planters possess a better understanding of herbicide resistance management as compared to Peninsular Malaysia planters. There is a need to increase awareness on sustainable use of herbicides through training and educational programs for planters in Peninsular Malaysia. © 2024, Sociedade Brasileira da Ciencia das Plantas Daninha. All rights reserved.
Sociedade Brasileira da Ciencia das Plantas Daninha
26759462
English
Article

author Seng C.T.; Yusop N.; Pauzi S.A.; Ramli N.K.C.M.; Aani S.N.A.; Sahal M.S.A.M.; Pahang J.T.; Purba E.; Sa’adah N.
spellingShingle Seng C.T.; Yusop N.; Pauzi S.A.; Ramli N.K.C.M.; Aani S.N.A.; Sahal M.S.A.M.; Pahang J.T.; Purba E.; Sa’adah N.
Survey of herbicide-resistant weed management in oil palm estates from Peninsular Malaysia and Indonesia
author_facet Seng C.T.; Yusop N.; Pauzi S.A.; Ramli N.K.C.M.; Aani S.N.A.; Sahal M.S.A.M.; Pahang J.T.; Purba E.; Sa’adah N.
author_sort Seng C.T.; Yusop N.; Pauzi S.A.; Ramli N.K.C.M.; Aani S.N.A.; Sahal M.S.A.M.; Pahang J.T.; Purba E.; Sa’adah N.
title Survey of herbicide-resistant weed management in oil palm estates from Peninsular Malaysia and Indonesia
title_short Survey of herbicide-resistant weed management in oil palm estates from Peninsular Malaysia and Indonesia
title_full Survey of herbicide-resistant weed management in oil palm estates from Peninsular Malaysia and Indonesia
title_fullStr Survey of herbicide-resistant weed management in oil palm estates from Peninsular Malaysia and Indonesia
title_full_unstemmed Survey of herbicide-resistant weed management in oil palm estates from Peninsular Malaysia and Indonesia
title_sort Survey of herbicide-resistant weed management in oil palm estates from Peninsular Malaysia and Indonesia
publishDate 2024
container_title Advances in Weed Science
container_volume 42
container_issue
doi_str_mv 10.51694/AdvWeedSci/2024;42:00020
url https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85208460489&doi=10.51694%2fAdvWeedSci%2f2024%3b42%3a00020&partnerID=40&md5=fe9892aa8fe10b1a84a9728110180aa0
description Background: The use of herbicides is a common practice to control weeds in oil palm plantation. However, high dependency on herbicides causes intense selection pressure, which could lead to the evolution of herbicide resistance in weed. Objective: To assess planters’ understanding of herbicide resistance management practices. Methods: Data were gathered via the application of questionnaires during the 2022 growing season to planters working with oil palm in Peninsular Malaysia and Indonesia. There were 101 respondents, covering about 14 states. Results: Planters (75 to 85% respondents) found herbicide rotation, cover crops, and pre-emergence herbicide application effective against herbicide-resistant weeds, but high herbicide costs hindered their selection of chemical solutions. Peninsular Malaysia planters (30 to 78% respondents) reported five major putative resistant weeds such as Eleusine indica (L.) Gaertn., Clidemia hirta (L.) D. Don., Melastoma malabathricum (L.), Ischaemum muticum (L.), and Asystasia gangetica (L.) T. Anderson. Indonesian planters (28 to 43% respondents) faced putative resistance in E. indica and C. hirta. Peninsular Malaysia’s higher incidence of putative resistance was linked to insufficient knowledge of herbicide classification, less use of tank-mixed herbicides, and reduced herbicide rates, potentially fostering resistance evolution. Conclusions: The survey revealed that Indonesia planters possess a better understanding of herbicide resistance management as compared to Peninsular Malaysia planters. There is a need to increase awareness on sustainable use of herbicides through training and educational programs for planters in Peninsular Malaysia. © 2024, Sociedade Brasileira da Ciencia das Plantas Daninha. All rights reserved.
publisher Sociedade Brasileira da Ciencia das Plantas Daninha
issn 26759462
language English
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