| Literature DB >> 33821561 |
Hugh J Beckie1, Roberto Busi1, Francisco J Lopez-Ruiz2, Paul A Umina3,4.
Abstract
Herbicides are the largest category of pesticides used in global agriculture, which is reflected in the rate of increase in the number of unique cases of herbicide-resistant weed biotypes since the late 1950s. Recommended herbicide resistance management strategies and tactics have evolved over the past 50 years through cumulative research and experience and have been regularly reviewed. Nevertheless, new perspectives may be gained by viewing current recommended strategies through the lens of insecticide, fungicide, and antibiotic resistance management. What commonalities exist and what is the basis for disparate strategies? Although pesticide and antibiotic mixtures (or combinations) are generally more effective than rotations (or alternations) in mitigating or managing resistance, the latter strategy is often employed because of greater ease of implementation and other reasons. We conclude that there are more common than different strategies for mitigating or managing pesticide and antibiotic resistance. Overall, a reduction in selection pressure for resistance evolution through diverse multi-tactic management programmes, and disruption or mitigation of the dispersal or transmission of problematic genotypes are needed to sustain the longevity of current and future mode-of-action products for crop and human health protection.Entities:
Keywords: antibiotic resistance; fungicide resistance; herbicide resistance; insecticide resistance; integrated pest management; resistance management
Year: 2021 PMID: 33821561 DOI: 10.1002/ps.6395
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pest Manag Sci ISSN: 1526-498X Impact factor: 4.845